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John Wayne Glover
See also
See also List of serial killers by country List of serial killers by number of victims
John Wayne Glover
References
References Category:1932 births Category:2005 suicides Category:2005 deaths Category:20th-century Australian criminals Category:Australian gamblers Category:Australian people convicted of indecent assault Category:Australian people who died in prison custody Category:Australian prisoners sentenced to multiple life sentences Category:Australian serial killers Category:Criminals from Sydney Category:English emigrants to Australia Category:Naturalised citizens of Australia Category:People convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm Category:People from Wolverhampton Category:People with personality disorders Category:Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by New South Wales Category:Prisoners who died in New South Wales detention Category:Serial killers who died by suicide in prison custody Category:Suicides by hanging in New South Wales Category:20th-century British Army personnel Category:Military personnel from Wolverhampton
John Wayne Glover
Table of Content
Short description, Biography, Background, Murders, Pre-murder offence, Gwendolin Mitchelhill, Lady Winfreda Isabel Ashton (Hoggard), Further offences, Margaret Pahud, Olive Cleveland, Muriel Falconer, Police investigation, Separation, Joan Sinclair, Trial, "Confession" sketch, Imprisonment and death, Media, See also, References
Michael Brook
Short description
Michael Brook (born 1951) is a Canadian guitarist, inventor, music producer, and film music composer. He plays in many genres, including rock, electronica, world music, minimalism and film scores. His collaborations with musicians around the world have made him "one of the most sought-after producers in the music industry." Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Brook lives in Los Angeles. He is the creator of the Infinite Guitar.
Michael Brook
Career
Career Brook studied music and electronics at York University and worked as an engineer at the Grant Avenue studios, then owned by the Lanois brothers. Here he worked with Brian Eno, The Edge, Jon Hassell and Harold Budd. In 1985 he released his first solo album Hybrid, containing instrumental tracks with Indian and African elements. Another notable collaboration was Sleeps with the Fishes with Clan of Xymox member Pieter Nooten (4AD, 1987). He worked on the album Set by Youssou N'Dour, Miss America by Mary Margaret O'Hara and collaborated with Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan on the album Mustt Mustt. He toured as a member of the Sylvian and Fripp tour group, with the final concert at the Royal Albert Hall in December 1993 documented on the album Damage: Live. He also opened the concerts with a solo set, featuring the Infinite Guitar with effects and sequencer backing. In 1998, he produced the album "Volcán: Tributo a José José", a tribute album to singer Jose Jose. In 2006, the solo album RockPaperScissors was released, with an ambient remix version following in 2007. Brook toured small venues in Canada and the United States in late January/early February, 2007. In writing about his score for the film 2015 film Brooklyn, Variety said the film was "buoyed along by a beautiful Michael Brook score and The Hollywood Reporter praised his "evocative scoring."
Michael Brook
Awards and honors
Awards and honors He was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1996 for his production work and as a co-artist on Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's album Night Song.Ahmad, Salman. Rock & Roll Jihad: A Muslim Rock Star's Revolution. New York: Free Press, 2010. 127. Brook's soundtrack to Into the Wild was nominated for a Golden Globe Award in 2008. He also contributed a track to The Edge's soundtrack for the film Captive (1986). Brook's Infinite Guitar was later utilized by The Edge on U2's The Joshua Tree (1987). Two films that he scored, Brooklyn and Aloft, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2015. He won ASCAP awards in 2011 for The Fighter and 2013 for The Vow. He won the Havana Film Festival award for best music in 2011 for El Infierno.
Michael Brook
Selected discography
Selected discography
Michael Brook
Studio and live albums
Studio and live albums YearArtistsTitleDetails1985 Michael Brook with Brian Eno and Daniel LanoisHybrid Released: 26 July 1985 Label: Editions EG (EGED 41) Formats: LP, CD1986 Jon HassellPower Spot Released: 29 September 1986 Label: ECM (ECM 1327) Formats: LP, CD Brook plays infinite guitar on three tracks1987 Pieter Nooten and Michael BrookSleeps with the Fishes Released: 12 October 1987 Label: 4AD (CAD 710) Formats: LP, CD1990 Nusrat Fateh Ali KhanMustt Mustt Released: 14 February 1990 Label: Real World (RW 15) Formats: LP, CD First collaboration with Khan; credited only to Khan1992Michael BrookCobalt Blue Released: 1 June 1992 Label: 4AD (CAD 2007) Formats: CDReissued together in 1999 as a 2-CD set titled Cobalt Blue & Live at the AquariumLive at the Aquarium - London Zoo 21 May 1992 Released: 21 September 1992 Label: 4AD (TAD 2011) Formats: limited edition CD1994 David Sylvian and Robert FrippDamage: Live Released: 1 October 1994 Label: Virgin (DAMAGE 1) Formats: CD Featuring Michael Brook1995 U. Srinivas and Michael BrookDream Released: 29 August 1995 Label: Real World (RW 47) Formats: CD Featuring Trey Gunn Michael BrookShona Released: 1995 Label: Sine (SIN002) Formats: CD Unofficial release, recorded live during the Lanzarote Music Festival, December 19891996 Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Michael BrookNight Song Released: 20 February 1996 Label: Real World (RW 50) Formats: CD Second collaboration with Khan1997 Iarla Ó Lionáird with Michael BrookThe Seven Steps to Mercy (Seacht gCoiscéim Na Trocaire) Released: 22 September 1997 Label: Real World (RW 67) Formats: CD Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Michael BrookNusrat Fateh Ali Khan and Michael Brook Remixed: Star Rise Released: 6 October 1997 Label: Real World (RW 68) Formats: CD, 2LP Last collaboration with Khan; features remixes of tracks from Mustt Mustt and Night SongReighley, Kurt B. "Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan & Michael Brook: Remixed" CMJ New Music Monthly 55 (Mar 1998): 40.1998 Djivan Gasparyan and Michael BrookBlack Rock Released: 7 September 1998 Label: Real World (RW 73) Formats: CD 2001 Hukwe Zawose and Michael BrookAssembly Released: 29 October 2001 Label: Real World (RW 100) Formats: CD 2006Michael BrookRockPaperScissors Released: 18 July 2006 Label: Canadian Rational/bigHelium Entertainment (CRBHE002) Formats: CD 2007BellCurve Released: 23 October 2007 Label: Canadian Rational/bigHelium Entertainment (CRBHE010) Formats: CD Remix album of RockPaperScissors by James Hood2008 Djivan Gasparyan and Michael BrookPenumbra Released: 23 September 2008 Label: Canadian Rational (CR 1011) Formats: CD Second collaboration with Gasparyan
Michael Brook
Soundtracks
Soundtracks Captive (1986) – co-writer/producer with The Edge. Heat (1995) Albino Alligator (1996) Affliction (1997) Crime and Punishment in Suburbia (2000) Mission: Impossible 2 (2000) Black Hawk Down (2001) - music composed by Hans Zimmer Charlotte Sometimes (2002) India: Kingdom of the Tiger (2002) An Inconvenient Truth (2006) Tre (2007) Into the Wild (2007) Americanese (2008) Road, Movie (2009) Morning (2010) 9500 Liberty (2010) The Fighter (2010) Country Strong (2010) El Infierno (2010) Darwin (2011) Undefeated (2011) The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012) Cas and Dylan (2013) Aloft (2015) Brooklyn (2015) Tallulah (2016) Stronger (2017) My Days of Mercy (2017) Le Brio (2017) Giant Little Ones (2019)
Michael Brook
See also
See also List of ambient music artists
Michael Brook
References
References
Michael Brook
External links
External links Michael Brook's Official Website Category:1951 births Category:Living people Category:Musicians from Toronto Category:Canadian guitarists Category:Canadian record producers Category:Canadian inventors Category:Real World Records artists Category:4AD artists Category:Canadian experimental musicians Category:All Saints Records artists Category:E.G. Records artists Category:Canadian film score composers Category:20th-century Canadian composers Category:21st-century Canadian composers Category:Best Original Score Genie and Canadian Screen Award winners
Michael Brook
Table of Content
Short description, Career, Awards and honors, Selected discography, Studio and live albums, Soundtracks, See also, References, External links
Alfred Pringsheim
short description
Alfred Pringsheim (2 September 1850 – 25 June 1941) was a German mathematician and patron of the arts. He was the father-in-law of the author and Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann.
Alfred Pringsheim
Family and academic career
Family and academic career thumb|left|He moved into "Pringsheim Palace" at 12 Arcis Street, Munich, in 1889. Pringsheim was born in Ohlau, Province of Silesia (now Oława, Poland). He came from an extremely wealthy Silesian merchant family with Jewish roots. He was the first-born child and only son of the Upper Silesian railway entrepreneur and coal mine owner Rudolf Pringsheim (1821–1901) and his wife Paula, née Deutschmann (1827–1909). He had a younger sister, Martha. Pringsheim attended the Maria Magdalena Gymnasium in Breslau, where he excelled in music and mathematics. Starting in 1868 he studied mathematics and physics in Berlin and at the Ruprecht Karl University in Heidelberg. In 1872 he was awarded a doctorate in mathematics, studying under Leo Königsberger. In 1875, he moved from Berlin, where his parents lived, to Munich to earn his habilitation. Two years later he became a lecturer at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich. In 1886 Pringsheim was appointed associate professor of mathematics there, and in 1901 full professor. He retired as emeritus professor in 1922. He was elected a member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences in 1898, a position he held until 1938, and was a corresponding member of the Göttingen Academy of Sciences. He was also awarded membership in the Leopoldina, Germany's oldest academy of natural sciences. Pringsheim considered himself to be a German citizen who no longer followed the "Mosaic belief" (meaning conservative or orthodox Judaism). He repeatedly declined to have himself baptized. In 1878 Pringsheim married the Berlin actress Gertrude Hedwig Anna Dohm (1855–1942), whose mother was the Berlin advocate of women's rights Hedwig Dohm (1831–1919). They had five children: Erik (1879–1909), Peter (born 1881), Heinz (born 1882) and twins born in 1883, Klaus and Katharina, known as Katia. His first-born son, Erik, was exiled to Argentina because of his dissolute life and gambling debts and died there at an early age. His sons Peter and Klaus followed him in pursuing academic careers, obtaining professorships in physics and musical composition. One musician in the family was enough, so his third son, Heinz, became an archaeologist with a doctorate in that field, but soon changed course, becoming a successful conductor and critic in Berlin and Munich. His daughter Katia was the first female in Munich to earn the qualifications for university admission and was one of the first active women students at Munich University. She later became the wife of the author and Nobel Prize winner Thomas Mann. In 1889 Pringsheim and his family moved into a Neo-Renaissance villa at Arcisstrasse 12 designed by the Berlin architects Kayser & von Großheim with interior furnishings provided by Joh. Wachter and the court furniture manufacturer O. Fritsche of Munich. On major social nights the Munich elite was hosted here in what was known as the Pringsheim Palace. There he had the Romantic painter Hans Thoma, of similar political affiliation, decorate the music room. Besides mathematics, ever since his youth Pringsheim was also intensively occupied with music, and adapted various compositions of Richard Wagner for the piano. Later he became interested in the theory and history of art, building up important collections of majolica earthenware and silver.Seelig Lorenz. 2016. The Art Collection of Alfred Pringsheim (1850-1941). Oxford University Press. His was the largest and most important private collection of majolica in Germany consisting of 440 pieces.Otto von Falke, Die Majolikasammlung Alfred Pringsheim in München (Leiden, 1914–23) He also collected enamels, stained-glass panels, tapestries, and paintings by Franz von Lenbach.Seelig, Lorenz.(2017). "The art collection of Alfred Pringsheim (1850–1941)." Journal of the History of Collections. V. 29 (March): 161–180. In his novel Royal Highness, Thomas Mann portrayed his father-in-law as the character Samuel Spoelman. center|thumb|350x350px|Pringsheim at the Fourth Conference International Union for Cooperation in Solar Research at Mount Wilson Observatory, 1910
Alfred Pringsheim
Mathematical investigations
Mathematical investigations In mathematical analysis, Pringsheim studied real and complex functions, following the power-series-approach of the Weierstrass school. Pringsheim published numerous works on the subject of complex analysis, with a focus on the summability theory of infinite series and the boundary behavior of analytic functions. One of Pringsheim's theorems, according to Hadamard earlier proved by E. Borel, states that a power series with positive coefficients and radius of convergence equal to 1 has necessarily a singularity at the point 1. This theorem is used in analytic combinatoricsPhilippe Flajolet and Robert Sedgewick, Analytic Combinatorics, Cambridge University Press, 2008, and the Perron–Frobenius theory of positive operators on ordered vector spaces.Samuel Karlin and H. M. Taylor. "A First Course in Stochastic Processes." Academic Press, 1975 (second edition). Samuel Karlin. "Mathematical Methods and Theory in Games, Programming, and Economics." Dover Publications, 1992. . Another theorem named after Pringsheim gives an analyticity criterion for a C∞ function on a bounded interval, based on the behaviour of the radius of convergence of the Taylor expansion around a point of the interval. However, Pringsheim's original proof had a flaw (related to uniform convergence), and a correct proof was provided by Ralph P. Boas. Pringsheim and Ivan Śleszyński, working separately, proved what is now called the Śleszyński–Pringsheim theorem on convergence of certain continued fractions. Besides his research in analysis, Pringsheim also wrote articles for the Enzyklopädie der mathematischen Wissenschaften on the fundamentals of arithmetic and on number theory. He published papers in the Mathematische Annalen. As an officer of the Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften, he recorded the minutes of its scientific meetings. He also proved a significant part of the Abel–Dini–Pringsheim theorem, a convergence test for a series in which the nth term is divided by the nth partial sum.
Alfred Pringsheim
Acquaintance with the Wagner family
Acquaintance with the Wagner family Pringsheim had a deep, early interest in music and was especially fascinated by the works of Richard Wagner. He corresponded with Wagner personally, and he took Wagner's letters with him when he went into exile to Switzerland. His musical inclinations led to the publication of several arrangements of Wagner's work, and he also wrote on subjects in the field of music. His association with Wagner was so intense that Pringsheim supported Wagner financially to a significant extent, and also backed the Bayreuth music festival. In gratitude, he received a certificate designating him as a patron, which guaranteed him a seat at certain performances. In her memoirs about this acquaintance with Wagner, his granddaughter, Erika Mann, wrote that Prof. Pringsheim was even once involved in a duel because someone had insulted Wagner.
Alfred Pringsheim
Financial situation
Financial situation His family's fortune left Pringsheim a wealthy man. He also had a sizeable monthly income as a full professor at the university. After the death of the family patriarch in 1913 he had at his disposal assets amounting to 13 million marks and an annual income of 800,000 marks,Klaus Harpprecht: Thomas Mann. Eine Biographie, Rowohlt, Reinbek 1995, p. 215 which is today equivalent to 10.5 million euro and 646,000 euro, respectively. Pringsheim's financial decline began with World War I. As a “German patriot” he subscribed to war loans which lost their nominal value after the war, which meant the loss of a major part of his capital. The disastrous inflation of 1923 and 1924 resulted in additional high losses. As a result, he had to sell part of his art collection, which probably included a mural by Hans Thoma. He commented, ironically, “I live from wall to mouth”. He also had to sell his marvellous mathematics library which contained many precious books dating back to the sixteenth century. The auction catalogue is still preserved in the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek.
Alfred Pringsheim
Nazi persecution
Nazi persecution When the Nazis came to power in 1933, Pringsheim was persecuted because of his Jewish origins. In 1933, the Nazis seized the Pringsheim Palace. In 1934, he refused to take a loyalty oath to Hitler's Nazi government. The Pringheim's passports were canceled by the Nazi authorities in early 1937. Primarily because of his age (he was in his mid-80s) he did not want to go abroad, as did most of his family, and remained in Germany. One of many antisemitic pieces of Nazi legislation, the which came into effect 1 January 1938, forced him to legally change his name into Alfred Israel Pringsheim at age 87. At first, he was not allowed to leave the country. Winifred Wagner was not able to help the elderly Wagner devotee in this respect. Through the intervention of the then-rector of Munich University (LMU), his former neighbor Karl Haushofer, who was a friend of Rudolf Hess, and the professor of mathematics Oskar Perron, one of Alfred Pringsheim's former students, as well as through the initiative of a courageous member of the SS who arranged for passports at the last minute, he and his wife were able to leave for Zürich, Switzerland on 31 October 1939 after suffering further grave humiliations. During Kristallnacht, in November 1938, the SS seized Pringsheim's maiolica collection from his home in Munich. His world famous collection of majolica was sold in a forced sale by the Nazis at Sotheby's in London in 1939 in exchange for permission to emigrate. The fate of his goldsmith collection is less well known. Pringsheim's house was forceably sold to the Nazi party. It was torn down and replaced by a party administration building. The files of all German Nazi party members were stored there until 1945. Today it houses the Institute of Art History of Munich University (LMU) and the offices of the Munich State Collection of Antiquities, among others entities. Pringsheim died on 25 June 1941 in Zürich. His wife then apparently burned all of the personal effects which had been brought to Switzerland, including the letters from Richard Wagner. She died one year later.
Alfred Pringsheim
Restitution claims
Restitution claims Pringheim's heirs have requested that artworks looted by the Nazis and sold in forced sales be returned to the family. According to Christie's some of the works were restituted in 1953. However, other sources specify that there was a financial settlement with the German government. In 2008 Pringheim's heirs asked the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen Foundation to restitute to them seven pieces of Italian maiolica that the museum had acquired by the collector J.N. Bastert. Research into paintings and other objects is ongoing. More than 400 artworks are registered with the German Lost Art Foundation in its Lostart database.
Alfred Pringsheim
Publications
Publications Entehrt. Ausgeplündert. Arisiert: Entrechtung und Enteignung der Juden 2005 Daniel Bernoulli – Versuch einer neuen Theorie der Wertbestimmung von Glücksfällen, 1896 Irrationalzahlen und Konvergenz unendlicher Prozesse, Leipzig 1898 Über Wert und angeblichen Unwert der Mathematik – Address presented at a public meeting of the royal Bavarian Academy of Sciences, Munich, on the occasion of the 145th Endowment Day on 14 March 1904 Uber Konvergenz und Funktionentheoretischen Charakter Gewisser Limitar-Periodischer Kettenbruche, Munich 1910 Majolica, Leiden 1910 Über den Taylorschen Lehrsatz für Funktionen einer reellen Veränderlichen, offprint of the Royal Academy of Sciences, 1913 Majolikasammlung Alfred Pringsheim in München, Leiden 1914 Vorlesungen über Zahlenlehre – first volume, part 2 (I.2) Unendliche Reihen mit Reellen Gliedern, Leipzig 1916 Über singuläre Punkte gleichmässiger Konvergenz – presented on 6 December 1919 in Munich at the Bavarian Academy of Sciences (Minutes of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, Mathematical-Physical Division; offprint 1919) Grundlagen der allgemeinen Funktionenlehre Vorlesungen über Funktionslehre. Erste Abteilung: Grundlagen der Theorie der analytischen Funktionen einer komplexen Veränderlichen, Leipzig and Berlin 1925 Vorlesungen über Zahlen- und Funktionenlehre, 2 vol. (Bibliotheca Mathematica Teubneriana, volumes 28,29). Leipzig, 1916–1932 Kritisch-historische Bemerkungen zur Funktionentheorie, Reprint 1986
Alfred Pringsheim
Films
Films Frau Thomas Mann, film script and director: Birgit Kienzle, first broadcast: ARD, 9 August 2005 Die Manns – Ein Jahrhundertroman, film script: and Heinrich Breloer, director: Heinrich Breloer, WDR 2001
Alfred Pringsheim
See also
See also Dohm–Mann family tree Vivanti–Pringsheim theorem Aryanization Nazi plunder List of Claims for Restitution for Nazi-looted art
Alfred Pringsheim
References
References
Alfred Pringsheim
Sources
Sources Ernst Klee, Das Kulturlexikon zum Dritten Reich, Frankfurt/Main 2007 Franz Neubert (Hrsg.), Deutsches Zeitgenossen-Lexikon, Leipzig 1905 Hermann A.L. Degener, Wer ist's, Leipzig 1911 Hermann A.L. Degener, Wer ist's, Berlin 1935 Tilmann Lahme, "Von der Wand in den Mund – Ordnung und spätes Leid im Haus der Schwiegereltern Thomas Manns: Die Pringsheims im Münchner Jüdischen Museum", artikel in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung dated 7 April 2007
Alfred Pringsheim
Further reading
Further reading Inge und Walter Jens: Auf der Suche nach dem verlorenen Sohn – Die Südamerika-Reise der Hedwig Pringsheim 1907/8. Rowohlt Verlag, Reinbek, 2006, Lorenz Seelig: Die Münchner Sammlung Alfred Pringsheim – Versteigerung, Beschlagnahmung, Restitution. In: Entehrt. Ausgeplündert. Arisiert. Entrechtung und Enteignung der Juden, bearb. von Andrea Baresel-Brand (= Veröffentlichungen der Koordinierungsstelle für Kulturgutverluste, Bd. 3). Magdeburg 2005, pp. 265–290. Inge und Walter Jens: Katias Mutter. Das außerordentliche Leben der Hedwig Pringsheim. Rowohlt. Reinbek, 2005. Katia Mann: Meine ungeschriebenen Memoiren. Fischer TB. Frankfurt, 2000. Inge und Walter Jens: Frau Thomas Mann. Das Leben der Katharina Pringsheim. Rowohlt. Reinbek, 2003. Kirsten Jüngling/Brigitte Roßbeck: Katia Mann. Die Frau des Zauberers. Brigitte Propyläen. 2003.
Alfred Pringsheim
External links
External links Category:1850 births Category:1941 deaths Category:19th-century art collectors Category:19th-century German mathematicians Category:20th-century German art collectors Category:20th-century German mathematicians Category:Academic staff of the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich Category:German Jews Category:Heidelberg University alumni Category:Jewish art collectors Category:Jewish emigrants from Nazi Germany to Switzerland Category:Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich alumni Category:Mathematicians from the Kingdom of Prussia Category:People from the Province of Silesia Category:Presidents of the German Mathematical Society Category:Silesian Jews Category:Subjects of Nazi art appropriations
Alfred Pringsheim
Table of Content
short description, Family and academic career, Mathematical investigations, Acquaintance with the Wagner family, Financial situation, Nazi persecution, Restitution claims, Publications, Films, See also, References, Sources, Further reading, External links
Disco Bloodbath
Short description
Disco Bloodbath: A Fabulous but True Tale of Murder in Clubland is a 1999 memoir written by James St. James about his life as a Manhattan celebutante and Club Kid. The book specifically chronicles his friend Michael Alig's rise to fame, and Alig and his roommate's subsequent murder of fellow club kid and drug dealer Andre "Angel" Melendez. St. James was Alig's mentor, rival, and collaborator in the Manhattan party scene and was familiar with many of its key figures. The memoir was later retitled Party Monster after the 2003 motion picture of that name starring Macaulay Culkin, Seth Green, Chloë Sevigny, and Marilyn Manson. Disco Bloodbath has since gone out of print and often goes for several hundred dollars in auctions. It was only printed three times: in 1999, twice in paperback with different colored jackets, and once in hardcover. It was reprinted in 2003 under the title Party Monster - The Fabulous but True Tale of Murder in Clubland (); paperbacks are widely available.
Disco Bloodbath
Characters
Characters
Disco Bloodbath
Michael Alig
Michael Alig Michael Alig was a founder of the notorious Club Kids, a group of young clubgoers led by Alig in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In 1996, Alig and his roommate, Robert D. "Freeze" Riggs, were convicted of murdering Andre "Angel" Melendez in a confrontation over a delinquent debt.
Disco Bloodbath
DJ Keoki
DJ Keoki Superstar DJ Keoki is an electronic music DJ who was born in El Salvador but raised in Hawaii. He had no experience as a DJ when he was branded "Superstar DJ Keoki". It was infamous partykid (later, murderer) Michael Alig who helped in the early promotion of his then boyfriend DJ Keoki.
Disco Bloodbath
James St. James
James St. James James St. James (born James Clark) was a Club Kid of the Manhattan nightclub scene in the late 1980s/early 1990s, Alig's mentor, and the author of the book. He was notorious for a lifestyle of excess that included heavy drug use, partying, and bizarre costumes. St. James continues to work with World of Wonder, the production company that produced the films Party Monster: The Shockumentary (1998) and Party Monster (2003), both based on St. James' memoirs, Disco Bloodbath: A Fabulous but True Tale of Murder in Clubland.
Disco Bloodbath
Andre Melendez
Andre Melendez Andre Melendez, better known as Angel Melendez, was a Club Kid and purported drug dealer who lived and worked in New York City. Melendez and his family arrived in New York from Colombia when Melendez was 8 years old. Melendez became a drug dealer during the early 1990s after meeting Peter Gatien, owner of The Limelight and several other prominent nightclubs in New York City, and became a regular dealer in Gatien's clubs. He was frequently seen at Manhattan clubs wearing his trademark feathered wings.
Disco Bloodbath
References
References Category:1999 non-fiction books Category:1990s LGBTQ literature Category:American autobiographies Category:Autobiographies adapted into films Category:Club Kids Category:LGBTQ autobiographies Category:Simon & Schuster books
Disco Bloodbath
Table of Content
Short description, Characters, Michael Alig, DJ Keoki, James St. James, Andre Melendez, References
The Young Turks
pp-semi-indef
The Young Turks (TYT) is an American populist progressive news commentary show live streamed on social media platforms YouTube and Twitch. It additionally appears on selected television channels. TYT serves as the flagship program of the TYT Network, a multi-channel network of associated web series focusing on news and current events. TYT covers American politics, wars and conflicts in the Middle East, sports, and a wide array of other topics. The program was created by Cenk Uygur, Ben Mankiewicz and Dave Koller. Uygur is Turkish-American and named the program after the Young Turks movement of the 20th century. Currently co-hosted by Uygur and Ana Kasparian, it is also often accompanied by various other in-studio contributors. The Young Turks began as a radio program that premiered on February 14, 2002, on Sirius Satellite Radio before launching a web series component in 2005 on YouTube, and then later Twitch; at some point it was also carried on Air America. In addition to being carried on YouTube and Twitch, it is also currently available on Amazon Prime Direct, iTunes, Hulu, Roku, and on social media platforms Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. It has spawned two spin-off television series, one that aired on Current TV from 2011 to 2013 and a second that debuted on Fusion in 2016 as a limited-run program developed to cover the 2016 United States presidential election. The Young Turks also served as the subject of a documentary, entitled Mad as Hell, which was released in 2014. The network also has a channel on YouTube TV. For most of its existence TYT relied on small grassroots financial contributions from its viewership to sustain itself as an independent news organization. However, in 2017 TYT sought to expand its media network and hire more staff through various venture capital fundraising efforts that raised $20 million. The Young Turks is the second longest-running online news and politics talk show (after The Alex Jones Show started in 1999).
The Young Turks
Format
Format The Young Turks live streams for up to three hours, with its story selection and associated commentary broken up by format. Issues that the show focuses on include national political news, the influence of money in the political process, drug policy, social security, the privatization of public services, climate change, the influence of religion, abortion and reproductive rights, civil rights and issues of injustice towards people of color and sexual minorities, sexual morality, and the influence of corporations, neutrality and establishment political thought on traditional news media. The program maintains a liberal/progressive ideology in its political commentary. Co-creator and host Cenk Uygur describes himself as an "independent progressive" and asserts that the show is aimed at the "98 percent 'not in power'" and what he describes as the 60 percent of Americans who hold progressive views. The two-hour main show is usually hosted by Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian, with a rotating cast of other progressive co-hosts, including John Iadarola, Jayar Jackson and more. The first hour usually focuses on American politics, foreign policy and breaking news headlines. The second hour generally provides social commentary on a wide range of topics, both domestic and foreign. The program also features a post-game show, in which Uygur and Kasparian discuss their personal lives. Uygur has regular bits and on-air interaction with other staff members who create and run the show, including among others Jesús Godoy, Dave Koller, Jayar Jackson and Steve Oh. Each Friday, The Young Turks features a panel of guests from the worlds of politics, journalism, pop culture, sports and comedy – dubbed the "TYT Power Panel" – that is led by Uygur and John Iadarola in the first hour, and Ugyur and/or Jayar Jackson in the second hour. Along with Iadarola and Jackson, other fill-in hosts and recurring guests include series co-creator/contributor Ben Mankiewicz, television personality Brian Unger, Becca Frucht, Brett Erlich, Wes Clark Jr., Michael Shure, Cara Santa Maria, RJ Eskow, Gina Grad, Samantha Schacher, and Jayde Lovell.
The Young Turks
Production
Production thumb|250px|Cenk Uygur (left) and Ana Kasparian (right) presenting a show on June 23, 2015 The Young Turks is broadcast in a two-to-three hour live stream format, which airs Monday through Fridays at 3:00 p.m. Pacific Time. The program was originally based out of the living room of creator/host Cenk Uygur, but it moved production to a small office in Los Angeles after the show hired a limited staff to produce the program. When the program was given a secondary live show on Current TV in 2011, the network provided a larger studio in Los Angeles to house its television and online broadcasts; production was forced to leave the facility after Current TV was sold to Al Jazeera, prior to the network's conversion into the now-defunct generalized news service Al Jazeera America. In 2013, The Young Turks production staff relocated temporarily to new studio quarters at YouTube Space LA in Los Angeles. In October 2013, The Young Turks launched an Indiegogo campaign, aimed at raising $250,000 in order to build a new studio. Fundraising completed with $400,000 being raised. The program moved its production facilities and staff operations to a new studio facilities in Los Angeles later that year, with construction of their new studio being completed in June 2015. In 2017, TYT sought to expand its media network and hire more staff through various venture capital fundraising efforts that raised $20-million.
The Young Turks
History
History
The Young Turks
Radio program
Radio program The Young Turks was originally developed as a radio talk show that was similar in format to a Los Angeles-based public access television program that Cenk Uygur had hosted, titled The Young Turk. With the help of friend Ben Mankiewicz (with whom he had previously worked), his childhood friend Dave Koller, and Jill Pike, Uygur began The Young Turks as a radio program in February 2002 on Sirius Satellite Radio. In 2006, the program received attention for its 99-hour "Live on Air Filibuster," conducted during Congressional hearings for the nomination of Samuel Alito to the Supreme Court. Hosts including Thom Hartmann and John Amato filled in during the event, to allow the show's regular hosts and contributors to rest or take breaks. Prior to signing a distribution deal to carry the program on Air America in 2006, the show was broadcast on Sirius Satellite Radio, on Sirius Left 143 and later 146, airing weekdays from 6:00 to 9:00 pm. Eastern Time; a day-behind rebroadcast of the program aired on Sirius Talk Central 148 weekday afternoons from 12:00 to 2:00 pm. Eastern. Being carried exclusively on Sirius for several years, The Young Turks was the first show to air exclusively on Sirius Left that was not distributed through a syndication network. TYT was also carried by KFH (1330 AM and 98.7 FM, now KNSS (AM) and KNSS-FM) in Wichita, Kansas each weeknight from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Central Time and webcast by RadioPower.org. On February 2, 2009, TYT was removed from the broadcast schedule of America Left, a progressive talk channel carried on Sirius/XM Channel 167, and replaced by an additional hour of The Bill Press Show. The program returned to Sirius/XM on March 16, 2009. In late 2010, TYT announced through its Facebook page that it would discontinue carrying the program on Sirius/XM Satellite Radio; the last edition of The Young Turks to be carried on the service aired on November 19, 2010. TYT rejoined Sirius/XM in 2017 with the show being run on SiriusXM Progress.
The Young Turks
Web series
Web series The Young Turks was the first daily streaming online talk show, having begun airing in that format in 2006, with an official website on the internet and a channel hosted on YouTube. The show provides in-depth coverage on politics, news topics, current events, and other issues. In August 2007, Ben Mankiewicz left the show to serve as a contributor for TMZ's syndicated entertainment news program TMZ on TV. At roughly the same time, Jill Pike left to pursue a job in Washington, D.C. Ana Kasparian, then working as an intern for the program, was hired to do pop culture-focused segments. Mankiewicz eventually returned to The Young Turks as a regular correspondent. During the 2008 elections, the show developed close ties to Brave New Films. The program aired commercials for the independent film production company and featured actors such as Robert Greenwald and Jonathan Kim as guests. The success of TYT is due to a large extent of their shift from radio to the internet through the broadcast of programming content on online platforms. Uygur and co-host Kasparian applied a populist left branding and programming strategy that made TYT a successful global online organization, with larger numbers of YouTube subscribers and viewers than several other notable news networks like FOX, MSNBC and CNN. The presence of TYT on YouTube has given the network a platform to democratize production of content and practices associated with its online distribution through an ability to share, comment and like material on its channel. Through likes and shares of TYT content on many online platforms, audience members have become a "virtual word of mouth" expanding the network's reach to other people with similar views and stimulating the growth of the TYT community. Support by viewers for alternative media outlets like TYT adopting new technology has meant the network was able to overcome being a small sized organization of the traditional alternative media landscape. The emergence of TYT in the digital era has resulted in fewer operational costs regarding organizing and communication. TYT nonetheless has relied on small grassroots financial contributions from its viewers that gave it the ability to emerge as an alternative media organization that does not advocate for the interests of corporations. The financial contributions TYT received went to renting a studio, and to purchase production equipment and furniture. By 2010, TYT employed people and maintained a budget resembling the size of a small newspaper. On July 30, 2013, The Young Turks launched a TYT Network app on Roku, which features much of the same content that is already available for free through the program's YouTube channel, which has over 4.2 million subscribers and generates 50 million monthly views. The network is among the few online channels to generate more than 1 billion views since launching on YouTube, which does not market a channel on the Roku app store. Young Turks COO Steve Oh acknowledged that making the TYT Network available on Roku was the first part of a strategy to continue the network's growth, regardless of what medium in which its viewers are watching its content, with the intent to figure out a way to monetize its programming through multiple distribution channels, rather than relying on one or two larger channels (such as YouTube or cable television distribution). The network also announced plans to unveil native apps for iOS and Android devices. Oh also noted that the network's representatives were speaking with other media platforms about expanding its programming. In April 2014, The Young Turks began offering its content on Hulu. With this, it began providing a condensed 30-minute version of the program featuring excerpts from the full two-hour daily show, along with a 30-minute weekly version of its daily pop-culture show PopTrigger, with other shows being added shortly afterward. Oh stated on the Hulu launch that, "as TYT Network has grown from a single show to an entire network, we've consistently found ways to bring our shows to more people[..] We've long admired Hulu as a leader of online video and both parties saw an opportunity to bring digitally-native politics and pop culture talk shows to Hulu's audience." He also stated that the company is pitching shows to cable network, but had no immediate plans to revive a television broadcast as either a relaunched program or a show similar in format to the one it formerly produced for Current TV. The website's yearly revenue was roughly US$3 million in 2013. According to Cenk Uygur, "about a third of the revenue comes from subscriptions, and the rest comes from YouTube ads." At that time, the company maintained a staff of 30 employees. In 2014, the company received a US$4 million investment from Roemer, Robinson, Melville & Co., LLC, a private equity firm led by Republican former Louisiana Governor Buddy Roemer. In December 2016, TYT Network launched a crowdfunding campaign aiming to raise US$2 million for the hiring of four further investigative teams. Five months later, the aim was met. In August 2017, it was announced that The Young Turks have raised $20 million in venture-capital from 3L Capital, WndrCo (owned by businessman Jeffrey Katzenberg), Greycroft, and e.ventures. TYT stated it would use the funds to "hire additional management execs and creative talent, as well as enhance its subscription-video offering and expand marketing initiatives". Shawn Colo, managing partner of 3L Capital, joined the TYT Network's board. TYT operates under a strategy of diversifying its finances that involves the airing of socially responsible advertisements, offering subscriptions for TYT membership, selling its own merchandise and other investments. Among its advertising partners is Aspiration Bank, an organization involved in "socially conscious and sustainable banking services" and whom TYT presents as different from other banks and their fossil fuel and campaign financing investments. Due to popular demand from viewers, TYT established an online outlet selling its own label branded merchandise, such as t-shirts, that are often designed and voted upon through the input of its audience. Its online subscription membership has two plans, "insider" offering full web content access and discounts, and "activist", offering additional access to its townhalls and political events. Following the 2016 election, TYT fundraised for small grassroots donations among its members, raising thousands of dollars and created a media division named TYT Investigates devoted to investigative journalism with the aim to hold people with power to account. Operating as a watchdog outfit, TYT Investigates investigative journalists report on issues such as inequalities in the economic system, power held by corporations, and other topics sidelined by traditional media like the views of ordinary citizens at political events. For example, TYT journalist Emma Vigeland has attended US President Donald Trump's political rallies and interviewed supporters. In mid-December 2017, Politico reported that TYT was courting former CBS Evening News anchor Dan Rather to host a news show. On January 21, 2018, TYT confirmed that it will show The News with Dan Rather, a half-hour "untraditional evening newscast" weekly on Mondays in the time slot before the main Young Turks show.
The Young Turks
Linear channel
Linear channel On May 17, 2018, The Young Turks launched a 24-hour linear channel on YouTube TV which includes all of TYT's current shows and four new shows called The Damage Report, "#NoFilter","The Happy Half Hour" and "Old-School Sports". The channel has since been made available on The Roku Channel and Xumo as well.
The Young Turks
Reception
Reception In a September 2006 article, U.S. News & World Report contributing writer Paul Bedard described TYT as "the loudly liberal counter to the right-leaning presets on my Sirius Satellite Radio." In 2014, The Independent described it as "the most-watched online news show in the world." The network is reliant on its multimedia platforms to attract online viewers and its audience are "young, educated, affluent and politically interested" people who consume news from online sources. As a result of ongoing TYT membership drives, its base of subscribed members has grown numbering 32,000 in 2019. Per month, the media outlet receives 200 million views. On YouTube, its main show, The Young Turks, has more than 4.7 million subscribers. Over 12 million viewers (2019) are subscribed to its multiple online channels. TYT has become one of the largest watched online networks, with its videos seen over 8 billion times (2019). TYT's millennial viewership ranks the network first for news and politics across its online platforms.
The Young Turks
Awards and nominations
Awards and nominations The Young Turks has won and been nominated for numerous Internet content awards, including, but not limited to the following: In 2009, the program won in the Political category at the Podcast Awards, and won for "Best Political News Site" at the Mashable Open Web Awards. In 2010, it was nominated for a Streamy Award for "Best News or Political Web Series" and the "Audience Choice Award for Best Web Series". In 2011, the program won in the News category at the Third Annual Shorty Awards, and won for "Best News and Political Series" at that year's Webby Awards. In 2012, it won in the Best Video Podcast category at the Podcast Awards . In 2013, the program was nominated for two Streamy Awards in the Best News and Culture Series and Audience Choice Award for Series of the Year categories. In 2015, The Young Turks also won a Streamy Award in the News and Culture category. In 2017, TYT won the Shorty Awards Audience Honor for the Best in Overall YouTube Presence. Other awards won by The Young Turks in the 2010s were "Best Political News Site" and the "People's Voice Webby Award" in all 5 of its categories.
The Young Turks
Viewer statistics
Viewer statistics On April 20, 2013, The Young Turks announced that its YouTube channel had received over 1 billion video views. In September 2018, the company launched a membership drive, reporting the number of members to be around 27,000. As of August 2018, TYT had approximately 27,000 paying subscribers online. As of September 2017, the program's YouTube channel averaged a daily hit count of 2 million views. By August 2016, Cenk Uygur reported that number of paid subscribers had increased to more than 23,000. By October 2016, the total number of views for the TYT Network's YouTube channel had surpassed 3 billion.
The Young Turks
Controversies
Controversies
The Young Turks
Name controversy
Name controversy The show's name Young Turks has been criticized and called for change due to the Committee of Union and Progress' conflation with the larger Young Turks political movement in the Ottoman Empire which was responsible for committing the Armenian genocide, the Assyrian genocide, and the Greek genocide. Alex Galitsky, who works for the Armenian National Committee of America, stated "If a group decided to call themselves ‘the Young Nazis’, and pitched themselves as a disruptor or anti-establishment news outlet, people would be rightly outraged". In 1991, Cenk Uygur wrote an article in The Daily Pennsylvanian, the student newspaper of the University of Pennsylvania, in which he promoted Armenian genocide denial. In 2016, Cenk Uygur posted a statement on TYTs website in which he rescinded his Armenian genocide denial statements, arguing: "My mistake at the time was confusing myself for a scholar of history, which I most certainly am not. I don’t want to make the same mistake again, so I am going to refrain from commenting on the topic of the Armenian Genocide, which I do not know nearly enough about."Rescinding Daily Pennsylvanian Article Cenk Uygur, TYT Network; April 22, 2016 In response to the criticism he has explained that the name of the show was chosen because it is a popular colloquialism traditionally meaning a young radical who fights the status quo.
The Young Turks
Dismissal of Jordan Chariton
Dismissal of Jordan Chariton In November 2017, TYT fired field reporter Jordan Chariton over sexual assault allegations made against him by The Huffington Post. Chariton denied the accusations, considered legal actions and later he settled the matter with TYT.
The Young Turks
Unionization of ''TYT'' staff
Unionization of TYT staff In late February 2020, the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) sought to unionize the production and post-production staff at TYT.IATSE Launches Drive To Unionize The Young Turks News Site By David Robb, Labor Editor, www.deadline.com, February 12, 2020.EMPLOYEES AT THE YOUNG TURKS ANNOUNCE UNIONIZATION www.iatse.net, Tuesday, February 18, 2020. Uygur urged his employees not to, as he stated TYT is a small media organization and the move would endanger its financial viability; however, the network supported its workers holding a secret ballot to unionize. Employees expressed support for an open ballot and a bargaining process followed. On April 9, 2020, nine of fifteen members voted in favor to have their own union and unionize with IATSE, with the majority decision being approved by TYT.
The Young Turks
Resignation of Mondale Robinson
Resignation of Mondale Robinson In December 2024, TYT contributor and mayor of Enfield, North Carolina, Mondale Robinson, resigned live on air over what he views as Cenk Uygur and Ana Kasparian's shift away from progressive principles and embrace of the Make America Great Again movement and conservative personalities such as Glenn Beck.
The Young Turks
Television spin-offs
Television spin-offs
The Young Turks
''The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur''
The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur The first linear television incarnation of the program began as an hour-long show that premiered on Current TV on December 5, 2011. Co-created and hosted by Cenk Uygur (who executive produced the series with original program co-creator Dave Koller, with Jesus Godoy, Jayar Jackson and Mark Register serving as producers), the program was co-presented by Ana Kasparian, with Ben Mankiewicz, Michael Shure, Brian Unger, Wes Clark Jr. and RJ Eskow as contributors and correspondents. It was filmed at studio facilities in the Los Angeles suburb of Culver City. Current TV announced the launch of a separate television broadcast of The Young Turks on September 20, 2011, with the program intending to air Monday through Friday evenings at 7:00 pm. Eastern Time beginning in the fourth quarter of 2011. It was the second news and opinion program to air on Current, alongside Countdown with Keith Olbermann, and was part of a strategy to refocus the network's prime time schedule around progressive talk programming (which was followed by the debut of The War Room with Jennifer Granholm in January 2012). According to the show's website, the show was titled The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur to differentiate itself from the popular web series. For two years, the two separate shows were produced each Monday through Thursday, with a one-hour break between the production airtimes of the television and web shows. In a press release, representatives for Current described TYT as "a group of progressive, outspoken journalists and commentators discussing politics and pop culture" and founder Cenk Uygur as bringing a, "uniquely progressive and topical commentary about politics and pop culture." On January 2, 2013, Current TV was sold to Qatar-owned broadcaster Al Jazeera Media Network, which announced plans to reorganize the channel as Al Jazeera America, focusing on world news and investigative content with a more neutral tone; with the move, the channel would discontinue its talk programming slate, including The Young Turks with Cenk Ugyur, which ended its run on Current TV on August 15, 2013, shortly before the network's relaunch. In an interview with the Los Angeles Times, Uygur commented that with the discontinuance of the television broadcast, he was relieved to move on and focus on his web show and the TYT Network site, stating that he had been "exhausted from doing the two shows at once" and that he was glad to put his energies there, as he believes that the future of media will gravitate towards online content. Uygur also noted that he talked with Al Jazeera after the company bought Current, reaching a mutual agreement not to continue with the television broadcast due to the change in ideological tone that Al Jazeera America would maintain. However, members of The Young Turks on-air contributing staff, such as Michael Shure (who served as a political and general assignment contributor), Cara Santa Maria (part of TechKnow) and Ben Mankiewicz (who worked as a movie critic), regularly appeared on Al Jazeera America. The Young Turks also maintain a partnership with Al Jazeera's digital channel AJ+, in an arrangement first announced in March 2015.
The Young Turks
''The Young Turks on Fusion''
The Young Turks on Fusion The Young Turks returned to television with a weekly, hour-long program on Fusion, The Young Turks on Fusion, which premiered on September 12, 2016, for a twelve-week limited run. Hosted by Ana Kasparian and John Iadarola, the program – which was broadcast from college campuses around the United States, in a live-audience format modelled after ESPN's College GameDay – focused on coverage of the 2016 United States presidential campaign. The show also featured Cenk Uygur, Jimmy Dore, Ben Mankiewicz, Hannah Cranston, Hasan Piker, and Kim Horcher as contributors, as well as Fusion reporters and celebrity guest hosts. Piker is the nephew of Uygur and went on to become a well-known Twitch streamer and commentator in his own right.
The Young Turks
TYT Network
TYT Network The Young Turks has spawned a multi-channel network of associated web series and shows, known as the TYT Network. Some of the programs are produced in-house, including: TYT Sports – a sports commentary program that debuted in 2011; originally hosted by Cenk Uygur, Jayar Jackson and Ben Mankiewicz, Rick Strom took over as co-host in 2013 and was replaced in 2014 by Jason Rubin and Francis Maxwell. Rick Strom is the current host of the program on TYT Sports' YouTube Channel. Old School – a more informal show hosted by Cenk Uygur and Ben Mankiewicz discussing every-day topics and telling stories Rebel HQ – an "on-the-road" political commentary and interview program formerly hosted by reporter Jordan Chariton, which was created to cover the 2016 United States presidential campaign. The channel was primarily hosted by Emma Vigeland from 2018 until she joined The Majority Report with Sam Seder in November 2020. Segments are now produced by various TYT hosts and contributors. Formerly TYT Politics TYT The Conversation (formerly TYT Interviews) – an interview series conducted by various TYT hosts and contributors. The Damage Report with John Iadarola – Daily morning/early afternoon show that focuses the most critical issues facing the U.S. today Happy Half Hour with Brett Erlich – A more upbeat and lighter look at the "not bad" news of the week Indisputable with Dr. Rashad Richey – Daily afternoon show with Rashad Richey that focuses on delivering a heavy dose of fact-based truth with all his signature passion and insight. As of February 2022, it is “America’s Fastest Growing Television News Show." The Watchlist with Jayar Jackson – Daily morning/noon show that features a must-watch list of videos of the day, that covers news, politics, society, culture, current events, and more. Deep Dive with Jordan Uhl – Exclusively on TYT's Twitch channel, Jordan Uhl takes a ‘deep dive’ analysis on the news of the day and reacts to stories he finds on Twitter. Wosnia – Exclusively on TYT's Twitch channel, host Wosny Lambre scours the internet to bring you his commentary on the top stories in News, Sports and Entertainment. RayyActions – Exclusively on TYT's Twitch channel, host Rayyvanna looks at and reacts to current events and brings the audience stories to enjoy on a weekly basis. Galaxy Brain with Ben Carollo – Exclusively on TYT's Twitch channel, host Ben Carollo breaks down complex topics every week while engaging with the audience. Game Busters – Exclusively on TYT's Twitch channel, this show closes out the week with the audience getting to participate and sabotage the hosts' gaming live on Twitch. Other shows are not produced in-house: The Richard Fowler Show – a weekly political talk show hosted by Richard A. Fowler. The Bill Press Show – a daily talk show hosted by Bill Press, which is broadcast online, over radio and on Free Speech TV that became affiliated with the TYT Network in November 2016. Acronym TV – a commentary program focusing on policy and national security issues, hosted by Dennis Trainor Jr. Absurdity Today – a news satire program, hosted by Juliana Forlano. The Undercurrent – a talk program hosted by Lauren Windsor, which covers a broad variety of in-depth topics, and includes interviews with politicians, media figures and opinion makers, as well as documentaries. The Lip TV – a commentary program which maintains a live and unscripted format with a panel of experts on varying subjects of focus. Truth Mashup – a weekly Canadian comedy show, co-hosted by Bree Essrig (who formerly co-hosted Pop Trigger) and comedian and media activist Ron Placone. ScIQ – a bi-weekly infotainment series hosted by Jayde Lovell, an Australian-born neurophysiologist and director of science PR consulting firm ReAgency, which explores scientific topics. Programs produced for the TYT Network that are no longer in production include: thetopvlog – a series of vlogs by liberal political commentators that TYT helped launch in June 2010. twenTYTwelve – a political interview and commentary program, hosted by Michael Shure, that was launched in October 2011 to cover the 2012 United States elections. TYT Now – a commentary program that was hosted by columnist Tina Dupuy and Tim Mihalsky, which ran from May to August 2011. WMB – a commentary program hosted by Ben Mankiewicz, Michael Shure and Wes Clark Jr., which ran from May to June 2011. Reality Bites Back – a reality television-focused review series, hosted by Jacki Bray and Misty Kingma, which ran from May to July 2011. ThinkTank – a science and social commentary program that originated in 2011 as TYT University, before relaunching under its current format in 2014; hosted by Hannah Cranston alongside a rotation of guest co-hosts (including original co-host John Iadarola, who diminished his role on ThinkTank during 2017), the program deals with new facts, discoveries and perspectives on the world and people. The Point – a current affairs panel show, hosted by Ana Kasparian, that debuted in 2011, but has been on hiatus since January, 2016. Pop Trigger – an infotainment show, hosted by Brett Erlich and Grace Baldridge with a rotating slate of guest co-hosts, that provides intelligent conversation on pop culture news. Ran until August. 2018. Murder with Friends – Grace Baldridge invites guests to talk about some of history's most notorious murderers. Nerd Alert – a show that focuses on news about technology, gaming, movies and online geek culture; hosted by Kim Horcher, the program spun off from a segment that originated on TYT University. Ran until August, 2018. The News with Dan Rather – A weekly 30-minute rundown of current events with commentary hosted by ex-CBS News lead anchor Dan Rather. Filmed in Dan Rather's personal office in New York. What the Flick?! – a film review series that began in 2010; it is hosted by Ben Mankiewicz, Christy Lemire, Matt Atchity and Alonso Duralde. Guest critics have included Robert Abele, William Bibbiani, Grae Drake, Tim Grierson, Amy Nicholson, Witney Seibold, Dave White, and April Wolfe. Ran until August, 2018. Aggressive Progressives – a weekly political talk and satire show that debuted in August 2016; it is hosted by Steve Oh. It was co-hosted by Jimmy Dore from August 2016 until Dore's departure from the TYT Network in April 2019. Styleogue – a fashion and lifestyle program that debuted in 2014, which is dedicated to affordable fashion. TYT Investigates – the investigative reporting division of The Young Turks hosted by Michael Tracey, Ryan Grim, David Sirota, Eric Byler, Dylan Ratigan, Ken Klippenstein, and other reporters. #NoFilter – analysis and commentary from TYT host Ana Kasparian Old-School Sports – TYT Sports host Rick Strom & BlackSportsOnline Owner Robert Littal revisits and analyzes classic games and rivalries. Power Hour with Nina Turner – Hosted by former Ohio state senator Nina Turner and Cenk Uygur from September 2021 through January 2022. Currently on hiatus as Turner seeks election to Congress in Ohio's 11th congressional district. Unbossed with Nina Turner – weekday afternoon news show, launched Oct. 17, 2022 The Twitchuation Room hosted by Francesca Fiorentini – Exclusively on TYT's Twitch channel, a light-hearted weekly show with each episode focusing on a specific topic. It is a counterpart to her weekly talk/podcast show The Bitchuation Room on her YouTube channel. Programs no longer produced or owned by the TYT Network, but are still in production: The Breakfast Club – a morning radio show syndicated from WWPR-FM on iHeartMedia, hosted by Charlamagne Tha God, Angela Yee, and DJ Envy. Affiliated with the TYT Network from 2014 to 2019. The Humanist Report (broke away in 2023) – a progressive political YouTube channel and podcast hosted by political scientist Mike Figueredo that began in 2015. The Rubin Report (broke away in August 2015) – a formerly progressive political news talk show, hosted by Dave Rubin, that premiered in 2013; the program moved to RYOT News in 2015, and later to Ora TV. The show and host have since shifted to conservatism. The David Pakman Show – a political and current events radio show, hosted by David Pakman, that began in 2005 and was affiliated with the TYT Network from 2012 to 2015. The Jimmy Dore Show – a commentary program hosted by stand-up comedian and political commentator Jimmy Dore that began in 2009 and was affiliated with the TYT Network from 2009 to 2019. The Logical Leftist (also known as Waldorf Nation. Formerly known as Around the Nation with Jeff Waldorf and TYT Nation) – a talk show hosted by Jeff Waldorf. The Majority Report with Sam Seder – a news and politics show hosted by Sam Seder, which is a video broadcast of Seder's daily online radio program. The Ring of Fire (Formerly Go Left TV) is a multi-media outlet for the latest Progressive news, commentary and analysis hosted by Farron Cousins, Mike Papantonio and Sam Seder Secular Talk – a daily political talk show hosted by Kyle Kulinski, which is also broadcast on the Secular Talk Radio and BlogTalkRadio online networks.
The Young Turks
Political activity
Political activity TYT promotes itself as the "Home of Progressives". Uygur has stated that "TYT values journalistic objectivity". TYT commentary generates "hybridized content". This involves TYT referencing news from mainstream sources and providing its own content analysis by connecting it to different narratives and discourses related to the social realities of its audience. The network's commentary has generated counter narratives in relation to traditional policy discussions. TYT places news in its context and connects it to the decision-making process. By engaging with social movements, the station has called on its audience to become part of its "TYT army". The network uses its platforms for advocacy, such as calling for its audience to participate in the political process and give candidates support. As part of new media, TYT coverage conveys the frustration and discontent held by youth with the political system. Progressive social policies and liberal values are promoted through commentary by TYT. Examples include TYT calling for gun control and the need to mitigate violence by police during its coverage of the 2018 Parkland school shooting. In similar coverage of shootings, TYT has provided information on gun and crime related homicide numbers and placed into context the laws, police training and additional factors that worsen the situation. Hosts on TYT advocate for unionization in large companies and the sharing of profits with their workers.The Young Turks’ Progressive Founder Urged His Staff Not To Unionize By Dave Jamieson, The Huffington Post, February 24, 2020. The network has spoken out against corruption in politics and for the need to remove corporate donations out of the political system. The station has been critical of what it regards as a "corporate coup" in the US. TYT has criticized politicians from the US Democratic Party for alleged attachment to financial interests and for appearing to be progressive. Hosts on TYT have called for the Democratic Party to undergo a revitalization process. The network has been critical of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal and its supporters like Hillary Clinton, whereas TYT approved of Senator Bernie Sanders' opposition to it. The station has defended the whistleblower WikiLeaks organization and its data disclosures on several issues such as the TPP, the DNC email leak and the Hillary Clinton email controversy. TYT was skeptical about claims of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election. The station uses traditional and online media platforms regarding political action and mobilization for citizen engagement with institutional politics. For example, TYT townhalls are hosted in local communities involving a moderator asking questions of the expert panel followed by audience questions, with the events streamed on YouTube and on-demand web access for its subscription membership. Viewers also have the option to send video questions to the network if they are unable to be present at the townhall. TYT townhall events involve detailed commentary by hosts and guests on political topics ranging from personal experiences to abstract notions on issues of concern that serve to connect their audience and lived experiences with politics. During the 2016 US presidential election, TYT hosted townhalls with Sanders and Green party candidate Jill Stein. In the late 2010s, other TYT townhalls were held with Sanders on the climate change crisis. Several hosts for TYT have expressed support for Sanders. para. 22. thumb|250px|TYT sign supporting Medicare for All The network supports political candidates who are from the same ideological persuasion. Following the 2016 presidential election, Uygur co-founded Justice Democrats, an organization that seeks to get progressive candidates elected into office. During the US mid-term elections (2018), the network endorsed all candidates from the Justice Democrats (JD). TYT was the first network to give airtime to progressive candidates such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to discuss policies and contrast themselves from electoral opponents on its shows like Rebel HQ, a half an hour interview based program created in 2017. In 2018, TYT also featured other progressive political candidates on Rebel HQ such as Richard Ojeda during his congressional run, gubernatorial candidates Cynthia Nixon who ran in New York State and Christine Hallquist in Vermont to discuss their policies. As a platform for online and offline civic engagement and political action, Rebel HQ offers information about a candidate, their website and campaign. The show informs viewers on how they can contact politicians, assist progressive candidates affiliated or unaffiliated with the Justice Democrats through donations or to participate by volunteering, canvassing and attending events like rallies in local communities. TYT's online platforms facilitate the encouragement of civic participation with the political system that in 2018 assisted Justice Democrats in getting 7 congressional victories, 25 candidates during the general election and 78 in the primaries. After Ocasio-Cortez became a congresswoman, TYT has continued to cover and defend her from slants by the political and media elite. Other Justice Democrats congressional members like Ro Khanna and Rashida Tlaib have appeared on TYT discussing progressive policies and issues. In June 2019, during a high-profile Democratic presidential candidate campaign weekend in Iowa, TYT and a group of supporters launched the Progressive Economic Pledge campaign, challenging presidential candidates to sign. The pledge is to support higher wages, Medicare for All, Green New Deal, college for all and the end of private campaign financing. In mid-November 2019, Uygur filed to run for Congress in California's 25th district, a seat recently vacated by the resignation of Katie Hill, an office also being pursued by former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos. He received 6.6% of the vote and did not advance to the runoff, which was won by Republican Mike Garcia. On October 11, 2023, Uygur announced his campaign for President in the Democratic Primary. As of December 2023, he has been kept out of the primary due to the fact that he is not a natural-born American citizen. On December 6, 2023, TYT hosted a forum featuring Democratic Party presidential primary candidates U.S. Representative Dean Phillips, Marianne Williamson, and Cenk Uygur. Biden was invited but declined to attend. The candidates responded to the GOP debate being held in Tuscaloosa, which was scheduled to end at the same time. The discussion was moderated by John Iadarola, the main host of The Damage Report on the same network. On January 12, 2024, NewsNation hosted a second forum featuring Phillips, Williamson, and Uygur. Biden was invited but did not attend. The discussion was moderated by Dan Abrams.
The Young Turks
References
References
The Young Turks
External links
External links Category:Progressivism in the United States Category:Mass media in California Category:2002 establishments in the United States Category:American talk radio programs Category:2002 radio programme debuts Category:Internet television channels Category:American non-fiction web series Category:2005 web series debuts Category:YouTube channels Category:Multi-channel networks Category:Streamy Award-winning channels, series or shows Category:2010s American television news shows Category:2011 American television series debuts Category:Current TV original programming Category:2013 American television series endings Category:2016 American television series debuts Category:YouTube channels launched in 2005 Category:Progressive talk radio Category:Shorty Award winners Category:Naming controversies
The Young Turks
Table of Content
pp-semi-indef, Format, Production, History, Radio program, Web series, Linear channel, Reception, Awards and nominations, Viewer statistics, Controversies, Name controversy, Dismissal of Jordan Chariton, Unionization of ''TYT'' staff, Resignation of Mondale Robinson, Television spin-offs, ''The Young Turks with Cenk Uygur'', ''The Young Turks on Fusion'', TYT Network, Political activity, References, External links
Olli Kortekangas
Short description
thumb|Olli Kortekangas Olli Paavo Antero Kortekangas (born 16 May 1955) is a Finnish composer. Historical Dictionary of the Music and Musicians of Finland - Page 186 Ruth-Esther Hillila, Barbara Blanchard Hong · 1997 "Kortekangas studied composition at the Sibelius Academy with Einojuhani Rautavaara and Eero Hameenniemi from 1974 to 1981, did studies at the ... " Kortekangas was born in Turku. His early career in music began at Espoon Musiikkiopisto (Espoo Music Institute) and the youth choir Candomino. He then studied at the Sibelius Academy as a pupil of Eero Hämeenniemi and Einojuhani Rautavaara from 1974 to 1981, and completed his studies in West Berlin with Dieter Schnebel and in San Diego (UCSD) with Roger Reynolds. Later he has held teaching positions at the Sibelius Academy and the National Theater Academy. He was Composer-in-Residence at Oulu Sinfonia from 1997 to 2007.
Olli Kortekangas
Career
Career He has composed about 150 works covering a broad range, from choral works and instrumental miniatures to orchestral music and operas. He has received commissions from ten countries. Among his recent large-scale works are Seven Songs for Planet Earth, commissioned by the Choral Arts Society of Washington and the Tampere Philharmonic Orchestra, Migrations for mezzo-soprano, male voice chorus and orchestra, commissioned by The Minnesota Orchestra and recorded by BIS Records, and the song cycle Songs of Meena, commissioned by The Helsinki Philharmonic Orchestra. Kortekangas is particularly known for his choral music and operas, of which the latest are Messenius ja Lucia (2004), Daddy's Girl (2007), One Night Stand (2011), Oma vika (Own Fault, 2015), Veljeni vartija (My Brother's Keeper, 2018), and Koria täti (2021), as well as the church operas Elämänkuvat (Pictures of Life, 2019) and Ende und Beginn (2021). Kortekangas's work list also includes a number of chamber as well as instrumental solo works, particularly for organ and period instruments.
Olli Kortekangas
Awards
Awards Kortekangas has received a number of awards and recognitions, among them the Salzburg Opera Prize, the Special Prize of the Prix Italia Competition, and the prestigious Teosto Prize.
Olli Kortekangas
References
References
Olli Kortekangas
External links
External links Finnish Music Information Centre Fennica Gehrman (publisher) Category:1955 births Category:Living people Category:20th-century Finnish classical composers Category:Musicians from Turku Category:Finnish male classical composers Category:20th-century Finnish male musicians
Olli Kortekangas
Table of Content
Short description, Career, Awards, References, External links
Corinthian F.C.
Short description
Corinthian Football Club was an English amateur football club based in London between 1882 and 1939. Above all, the club is credited with having popularised football around the world,Cavallini, R. (2007). Play up Corinth. Stroud: Stadia, p.7. having promoted sportsmanship and fair play, and having championed the ideals of amateurism.Taylor, D.J. (2006). On the Corinthian Spirit. Yellow Jersey Press. p. 50. . The club was famed for its ethos of "sportsmanship, fair play, [and] playing for the love of the game". Corinthian Spirit, still understood as the highest standard of sportsmanship, is often associated with the side. This spirit was famously summed up in their attitude to penalties; "As far as they were concerned, a gentleman would never commit a deliberate foul on an opponent. So, if a penalty was awarded against the Corinthians, their goalkeeper would stand aside, lean languidly on the goalpost and watch the ball being kicked into his own net. If the Corinthians themselves won a penalty, their captain took a short run-up and gave the ball a jolly good whack, chipping it over the crossbar."Lacey, Josh (2005). God is Brazilian. Charles Miller: The Man Who Brought Football to Brazil. Tempus Publishing. p. 71. . Among others, Real Madrid were inspired to adopt Corinthian's white strip, while Sport Club Corinthians Paulista in Brazil and Zejtun Corinthians in Malta adopted their name.
Corinthian F.C.
History
History The club was founded on 28 September 1882 by Nicholas Lane Jackson, Assistant Secretary of the Football Association. At that time, football was still amateur, with the English game dominated by southern clubs. In international football (which had not yet spread beyond the home nations), Scotland prevailed, having won three consecutive matches over England by scores of 5–1, 6–1 and 5–4. Jackson attributed Scotland's success to "the greater opportunities our opponents over the border [have] of playing together", and aimed to counteract this by forming a club "composed of the best amateur players in the kingdom". In order to accomplish this aim, Corinthian took care to avoid playing matches on Saturdays (when players might be playing for other clubs). The first proposed name for the club was the "Wednesday Club", but this was changed to the "Corinthian Football Club" on the suggestion of Harry Swepstone. From the outset, Corinthian supplied large numbers of players to the England football team. During the 1880s, the majority of England caps were awarded to Corinthian players and, for two England matches against Wales in 1894 and 1895, the entire team consisted of members of the club (a feat achieved by no other club, before or since). thumb|left|250px|The Corinthian team of 1896–97 Given that the club's constitution declared that it should "not compete for any challenge cup or any prize of any description" the team originally only played friendly matches. An exception was later made for the Sheriff of London Charity Shield, for which they competed nine times between 1898 and 1907 (winning three), before the match was replaced in the calendar by the FA Charity Shield. The club would have been strong contenders for the era's honours had they entered major competitions — shortly after Blackburn Rovers beat Queen's Park in the 1884 FA Cup Final, the Corinthians beat Blackburn 8–1. In 1889, it was written that Corinthians was the only amateur club "which might be pitted against [inaugural Football League champions Preston North End] with any reasonable hope of success".Arthur Budd, "The Effect of Professionalism", in In the 1904 Sheriff of London Charity Shield against Bury (who had beaten Derby County 6–0 in the 1903 FA Cup final), Corinthian won 10–3. thumb|right|250px|The Corinthian team that toured North America in 1906 Corinthian began competing in the FA Cup from the 1922–23 season. They also competed in the 1927 FA Charity Shield against FA Cup winners Cardiff City, losing 2–1 at Stamford Bridge.
Corinthian F.C.
Honorary distinctions
Honorary distinctions Among many others: Inspired five Brazilian São Paulo railway workers to found one of Brazil's largest and most successful professional teams, Sport Club Corinthians Paulista. Fielded the first Black player to play Association Football at international level, Andrew Watson Inflicted English side Manchester United's heaviest defeat, beating the Red Devils 11–3 in a friendly in Leyton, London in 1904. Awarded Sweden their first National Football title, named the Corinthian Bowl. Inspired Percy Ashley to name Manchester Corinthians LFC in 1949.
Corinthian F.C.
Notable players
Notable players Notable players who have played for Corinthian include:Cavallini, Rob (2007) Play Up Corinth: A History of the Corinthian Football Club. Tempus Publishing. p. 99. . Andrew Watson: the first Black player to play Association football at international level. C. B. Fry: sporting polymath who made 74 appearances for Corinthian, described by contemporaries as "...probably the most variously gifted Englishman of any age" R. C. Gosling: described by Sir Frederick Wall, the long-serving Secretary of the Football Association, as "the richest man who ever played football for England". Charles Aubrey Smith: a former Corinthian footballer and British actor, who has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, situated at 6327 Hollywood Blvd. Max Woosnam: the English sportsman referred to as the 'Greatest British sportsman' in recognition of his achievements.Collins, Mick (2006). All-Round Genius: The Unknown Story of Britain's Greatest Sportsman. Aurum Press. p. 46. . Graham Doggart: a leading goal scorer of Corinthian, who went on to appoint England's World Cup winning manager, Sir Alf Ramsey. Charles Bambridge: held the record for the most years as England's top goalscorer; only Michael Owen, Vivian Woodward, Wayne Rooney, Gary Lineker, Jimmy Greaves and Harry Kane have more. Tinsley Lindley: A Corinthian centre-forward who famously wore his brogues instead of football boots. Charles Wreford-Brown: A constant figure throughout the club's golden era, he played 161 games for the club, scoring 8 goals.
Corinthian F.C.
Tours
Tours The club's foreign tours are also credited with having popularised football around the world; they were the first club to take the sport outside Europe; the 2000 and 2012 FIFA Club World Champions, SC Corinthians Paulista, are named after the club (indeed, Charles Miller, considered the father of football in Brazil, played for the club in 1892), and the 2015 FIFA Club World Champions, Real Madrid, wear white to this day in their honor. Their tours included South Africa, Canada, the United States, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Spain, Denmark, Holland, Austria, Sweden, Switzerland, Brazil, Ireland, Jamaica and Germany. During 'The Split', the 1907–1914 dispute about professional clubs being admitted to membership of the country Football Associations, Corinthian pledged its allegiance to the Amateur Football Alliance, as did Oxford University and Cambridge University. Corinthian therefore, banned from playing top home opposition by The FA, increased the frequency of their foreign tours; "Corinthian F.C. had little option but to concentrate on their [footballing] missionary work overseas and of the 131 matches played before 'The Split' was resolved in January 1914, 72 were played abroad". The club played at various venues including the Queen's Club, The Oval, and the old Crystal Palace. On 12 April 1939, the Corinthians played their last match. They merged with Casuals F.C. to form a new club, Corinthian-Casuals F.C.
Corinthian F.C.
Honours
Honours Sheriff of London Charity Shield: 3 Winners: 1898 (shared), 1900, 1904
Corinthian F.C.
England international players
England international players In all, Corinthian had 86 England Internationals (the most of any club), 16 England captains (the most of any club), 12 Welsh Internationals, 8 Scottish Internationals and 2 Irish Internationals. Many players played for Corinthian as a secondary club while playing for another primary club. The 17 players listed below are those that had Corinthian as their principal club: Claude Ashton (1 cap) Alfred Bower (5 caps) Jackie Burns (16 caps) Bertie Corbett (1 cap) Norman Creek (1 cap) Graham Doggart (1 cap) Tip Foster (4 caps) C. B. Fry (1 cap) Jackie Hegan (4 caps) Arthur Henfrey (4 caps) Cecil Holden-White (2 caps) Anthony Hossack (2 caps) Vaughan Lodge (2 caps) Bernard Middleditch (1 cap) William Oakley (12 caps) Basil Patchitt (2 caps) G. O. Smith (7 caps) Geoffrey Plumpton Wilson (2 caps) Danish international Nils Middelboe played for Corinthian after finishing his career with Chelsea.
Corinthian F.C.
See also
See also Scotch Professors
Corinthian F.C.
References
References
Corinthian F.C.
Further reading
Further reading Taylor, D.J. (2006). On The Corinthian Spirit: The Decline of Amateurism in Sport. Yellow Jersey Press. . Category:Corinthian-Casuals F.C. Category:Amateur football clubs in England Category:Amateur association football teams Category:Defunct football clubs in England Category:Association football clubs established in 1882 Category:Association football clubs disestablished in 1939 Category:Defunct football clubs in London Category:1882 establishments in England Category:1939 disestablishments in England
Corinthian F.C.
Table of Content
Short description, History, Honorary distinctions, Notable players, Tours, Honours, England international players, See also, References, Further reading
Industrialization of services business model
The
The industrialization of services business model is a business model used in strategic management and services marketing that treats service provision as an industrial process, subject to industrial optimization procedures. It originated in the early 1970s, at a time when various quality control techniques were being successfully implemented on production assembly lines. Theodore Levitt (1972) argued that the reason the service sector suffered from inefficiency and wide variations in quality were that it was based on the craft model. Each service encounter was treated as an isolated event. He felt that service encounters could be systematized through planning, optimal processes, consistency, and capital intensive investments. This model was the foundation of the success of McDonald's and many other mass service providers in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. Unfortunately, the application of assembly line techniques to service provision had several undesirable consequences. Employees found working under these conditions disempowering, resulting in low morale, high staff turnover, and reduced service quality. One of the most difficult aspects of this model for employees to deal with was the "smile incentives". Employees were instructed to put a smile on their face during the service encounter. This manufacturing and commercialization of apparent happiness has been criticised by many commentators, particularly Mundie (1987). Also many customers prefer the "personal touch". By the early 1990s most service providers turned their attention back to the human element and personalized their services. Employees were empowered to customize the service encounter to the individual characteristics of customers. Subsequently, scholars developed the service-profit-chain concept to understand how employees and customers interact to create value.Loveman, Gary W. "Employee satisfaction, customer loyalty, and financial performance an empirical examination of the service profit chain in retail banking." Journal of Service Research 1.1 (1998): 18-31.
Industrialization of services business model
See also
See also services marketing servitization of products business model list of marketing topics list of management topics
Industrialization of services business model
References
References Levitt, T. (1972) "Production line approach to service", Harvard Business Review, Sept-Oct, 1972, pp. 41–52. Mundie, P. (1987) "Internal marketing: cause for concern", Quarterly Review of Marketing, spring-summer, 1987, pp. 21–24. Category:Business models Category:Services marketing
Industrialization of services business model
Table of Content
The, See also, References
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Penile bone
Table of Content
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Gerry Rafferty
Short description
Gerald Rafferty (16 April 1947– 4 January 2011) was a Scottish singer, songwriter, musician and record producer. He was a founding member of Stealers Wheel, whose biggest hit was "Stuck in the Middle with You" in 1973. His solo hits in the late 1970s included "Baker Street", "Right Down the Line" and "Night Owl". Rafferty was born into a working-class family in Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland. His mother taught him both Irish and Scottish folk songs when he was a boy; later, he was influenced by the music of the Beatles and Bob Dylan. He joined the folk-pop group the Humblebums (of which Billy Connolly was a member) in 1969. After they disbanded in 1971, he recorded his first solo album, Can I Have My Money Back? Rafferty and Joe Egan formed the group Stealers Wheel in 1972. In 1978, he recorded his second solo album, City to City. A heavy drinker for much of his life, Rafferty died from liver failure in 2011.
Gerry Rafferty
Early years
Early years thumb|left|Foxbar in Paisley, Renfrewshire, where Rafferty grew up Rafferty was born in 1947 into a working-class family of Irish Catholic origin in Underwood Lane in Paisley, a son and grandson of coal miners. A son of Joseph Rafferty and Mary Skeffington, he had two brothers. Rafferty grew up in a council house in the town's Ferguslie Park, in Underwood Lane, and was educated at St Mirin's Academy. His Irish-born father, an alcoholic, was a miner and lorry driver who died when Rafferty was 16. Rafferty learned both Irish and Scottish folk songs as a boy. He recalled: "My father was Irish, so growing up in Paisley I was hearing all these songs when I was two or three. Songs like 'She Moves Through the Fair', which my mother sings beautifully. And a whole suite of Irish traditional songs and Scots traditional songs". Heavily influenced by folk music and the music of the Beatles and Bob Dylan, Rafferty started to write his own material.
Gerry Rafferty
Musical career
Musical career Rafferty left St Mirin's Academy in 1963. He then worked in a butcher's shop, as a civil service clerk, and in a shoe shop. However, he explained in an interview, "But there was never anything else for me but music. I never intended making a career out of any of the jobs I did." On weekends, he and a classmate, future Stealers Wheel collaborator Joe Egan, played in a local group named the Maverix, mainly covering chart songs by groups such as the Beatles and the Rolling Stones. In the mid 1960s Rafferty earned money, for a time, busking on the London Underground. In 1966, Rafferty and Egan were members of the band the Fifth Column. The group released the single "Benjamin Day"/"There's Nobody Here" (Columbia 8068), but it was not a commercial success.
Gerry Rafferty
The Humblebums and Stealers Wheel
The Humblebums and Stealers Wheel thumb|Rafferty (left) with Stealers Wheel on TopPop (1973) Dutch TV show In 1969, Rafferty became the third member of a folk-pop group, the Humblebums, along with comedian Billy Connolly and Tam Harvey. Harvey left shortly afterwards, and Rafferty and Connolly continued as a duo, recording two more albums for Transatlantic Records. A 1970 appearance at the Royal Festival Hall, supporting Fotheringay with Nick Drake, earned a positive review from critic Karl Dallas, who noted that all three acts showed "promise rather than fulfilment", and observed that "Gerry Rafferty's songs have the sweet tenderness of Paul McCartney in his 'Yesterday' mood". In his own stand-up shows, Connolly has often recalled this period, telling how Rafferty made him laugh and describing the crazy things they did while on tour. Once Rafferty decided to look in the Berlin telephone directory to see if any Hitlers were listed.Undated "Prank call" video of Billy Connolly on YouTube, uploaded 25 November 2007, Connolly remembers Rafferty as a prank call "expert... he used to make me scream.... We were looking for Hitler in a German phone book – and there are none!" After the duo separated in 1971, Transatlantic owner Nathan Joseph signed Rafferty as a solo performer. Rafferty recorded his first solo album, Can I Have My Money Back?, with Hugh Murphy, a staff producer working for the label. Billboard praised the album as "high-grade folk-rock", describing it as Rafferty's "finest work" to date: "His tunes are rich and memorable with an undeniable charm that will definitely see him into the album and very possibly singles charts soon". Yet although the album was a critical success, it did not enjoy commercial success. According to Rafferty's daughter Martha, it was around this time that her father discovered, by chance, Colin Wilson's classic book The Outsider, about alienation and creativity, which became a huge influence both on his songwriting and his outlook on the world: "The ideas and references contained in that one book were to sustain and inspire him for the rest of his life." Rafferty later confirmed that alienation was the "persistent theme" of his songs; "To Each and Everyone", from Can I Have My Money Back?, was an early example. In 1972, having gained some airplay from his Signpost recording "Make You, Break You", Rafferty joined Egan to form Stealers Wheel and recorded three albums with the American songwriters and producers Leiber & Stoller. The group was beset by legal wranglings, but had a huge hit with "Stuck in the Middle with You", which earned critical acclaim as well as commercial success: a 1975 article in Sounds described it as "a sort of cross between white label Beatles and punk Dylan yet with a unique Celtic flavour that has marked all their work". Twenty years later, the song was used prominently in the 1992 movie Reservoir Dogs; Rafferty refused to grant permission for its re-release. Stealers Wheel also produced the lesser top 50 hits "Everyone's Agreed That Everything Will Turn Out Fine" followed by "Star", and there were further suggestions of Rafferty's growing alienation in tracks such as "Outside Looking In" and "Who Cares". The duo disbanded in 1975.
Gerry Rafferty
''City to City'' and ''Night Owl''
City to City and Night Owl Legal issues after the break-up of Stealers Wheel meant that, for three years, Rafferty was unable to release any material. After the disputes were resolved in 1978, he recorded his second solo album, City to City, with producer Hugh Murphy, which included the song with which he remains most identified, "Baker Street". According to Murphy, interviewed by Billboard in 1993, he and Rafferty had to beg the record label, United Artists, to release "Baker Street" as a single: "They actually said it was too good for the public." The single reached #3 in the UK and #2 in the US. The album sold over 5.5 million copies, toppling the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack in the US on 8 July 1978. Rafferty considered this his first proper taste of success, as he told Melody Maker the following year: "...all the records I've ever done before have been flops. Stealers Wheel was a flop. 'Can I Have My Money Back?' was a flop. The Humblebums were a flop... My life doesn't stand or fall by the amount of people who buy my records." "Baker Street" features a saxophone riff played by Raphael Ravenscroft, although the origins of the solo have been disputed. As the singer recalled in a 1988 interview with Colin Irwin: In a 2006 interview with The Times, Ravenscroft said he was presented with a song that contained "several gaps": In his interview with Colin Irwin, Rafferty disputed this and said that Ravenscroft had been his second choice to play the saxophone solo, after Pete Zorn, who was unavailable: "The only confusion at the time that I didn't enjoy too much was the fact that a lot of people believed that the line was written by Raphael Ravenscroft, the sax player, but it was my line. I sang it to him." When a remastered version of City to City was released in 2011, it included the original, electric guitar 'demo' version of the song as a bonus track, confirming Rafferty's authorship of the riff (which appears in the demo note-for-note, as an electric guitar solo). In the liner notes to the album, Rafferty's long-time friend and collaborator Rab Noakes commented: Michael Gray, Rafferty's former manager, agreed: "Baker Street" remains a mainstay of soft-rock radio airplay and, in October 2010, it was recognised by the BMI for surpassing 5 million plays worldwide. "Stuck in the Middle With You" has received over 4 million plays worldwide, and "Right Down The Line" has had over 3 million plays. In a 2003 interview with The Sun (Scotland), Rafferty commented on how profitable his biggest song had been: "Baker Street still makes me about £80,000 a year. It's been a huge earner for me. I must admit, I could live off that song alone." Rafferty loathed the 1992 dance music cover version of "Baker Street" by Undercover, describing it as "dreadful, totally banal–it's a sad sign of the times". But it earned him another £1.5 million, selling around three million copies in Europe and America. He never let "Baker Street" be used for advertising, despite lucrative offers. "Right Down the Line" was the second single from City to City. The song made No. 12 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and No. 1 on the Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks charts in the US. It remained at the top of the adult contemporary chart for four non-consecutive weeks. The third single from the album, "Home and Dry", reached No. 28 in the US Top 40 in early 1979.Joel Whitburn, "The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits (6th Edition)", p. 493. The lyrics of "Baker Street" reflected Rafferty's disenchantment with certain elements of the music industry. This was elaborated on by music journalist Paul Gambaccini for BBC World News:.BBC World News (television), 5 January 2011 Rafferty's next album, Night Owl, also did well. Guitarist Richard Thompson performed on the track "Take The Money and Run", and the title track was a UK No. 5 hit in 1979. "Days Gone Down" reached No. 17 in the US. The follow-up single "Get It Right Next Time" made the UK and US Top 40.
Gerry Rafferty
''Snakes and Ladders'', ''Sleepwalking'' and ''North and South''
Snakes and Ladders, Sleepwalking and North and South Subsequent albums, such as Snakes and Ladders (1980), Sleepwalking (1982), and North and South (1988), fared less well, perhaps due partly to Rafferty's longstanding reluctance to perform live, with which he felt uncomfortable. In 1980, Rafferty and Murphy produced a record for Richard and Linda Thompson; though never released, it eventually evolved into their album Shoot Out the Lights. In his next album, Sleepwalking (1982), Rafferty took a very different approach to his work. Christopher Neil replaced Hugh Murphy, Rafferty's usual producer, introducing synthesisers and drum machines that give the album a harder, less acoustic sound, and apparently eschewing the richly detailed arrangements notable on Rafferty's three previous records. According to Murphy, interviewed a decade later: "Gerry had made three albums on the trot and I think he was pretty jaded at that time and feeling the pressure and he just thought, 'Well, I'll try another tack,' which is understandable". Instead of a cover painting and hand-lettering by John Patrick Byrne, who had illustrated every previous Rafferty and Stealers Wheel album, Sleepwalking featured a simple, stark photograph of an empty road stretching to the sky. There was change too in the songs. The deeply introspective lyrics of Sleepwalking suggest Rafferty found success far from glamorous: tracks like "Standing at the Gates", "Change of Heart", and "The Right Moment" suggest the singer was exhausted, burnt-out, and desperately seeking a new direction – and continued his long-running theme of alienation. Liner notes for the compilation album Right Down the Line (prepared with Rafferty's close co-operation, Retrieved from Wayback Machine archive of www.gerryrafferty.com, 27 February 2011) confirmed this several years later, noting the singer was now "finding himself at the crossroads and looking to replace the treadmill with a new dimension in his life". Rafferty sang the Mark Knopfler-penned song "The Way It Always Starts" (1983) on the soundtrack of the film Local Hero. Also in 1983, Rafferty announced his intention to take a break and devote more time to his family: "It dawned on me that since Baker Street I had been touring the world, travelling everywhere and seeing nowhere. Whatever I do in the future, it's at my own pace, on my own terms."Baker Street Legend Rafferty Dies at 63, Evening times , 5 January 2011 Based at 16th-centuryThe Weald Database: Tye Farm . Retrieved 25 February 2011. Tye Farm in Hartfield, near the Kent-Sussex border, Rafferty installed electric gates to protect his privacy, built a recording studio, and worked largely by himselfMusician Gerry Rafferty took refuge in farm at height of fame by Lee Moran, This is Kent, 11 January 2011. or with Murphy. In 1987, Rafferty and Murphy co-produced The Proclaimers first UK hit single "Letter from America". According to his former wife Carla, who discouraged visitors: "He was just stalling for time. Maybe some new project would suddenly happen, but I knew he'd crossed the line as far as the record business went." His next album, North and South, was released in 1988. In an interview that year with Colin Irwin to promote the album, Rafferty mentioned that he was interested in doing more production work and writing film soundtracks, and even floated the idea of writing a musical about the life of Robert Louis Stevenson. Reviews of the album were mixed. In The Times, critic David Sinclair was particularly scathing: "On North and South, it sounds as if he has thumbed a lift up the road to a mock-Texan bar somewhere in his native Scotland. There is a mid-Atlantic blandness lurking behind the rococo roots veneer." In the early 1990s, Rafferty recorded a cover version of the Bob Dylan song "The Times They Are a-Changin'" with Barbara Dickson, who had contributed backing vocals to both City to City and Night Owl. The track appeared on Dickson's albums Don't Think Twice It's All Right (1992) and The Barbara Dickson Collection (2006).Don't Think Twice It's All Right by Barbara Dickson. Columbia Records Catalogue Number: MOOD CD25, Released: 3 August 1992. (Retrieved 12 March 2012.)
Gerry Rafferty
''On a Wing and a Prayer'' and ''Over My Head''
On a Wing and a Prayer and Over My Head Rafferty released two further albums in the 1990s in what musician Tom Robinson later described as "a major return to form"."Gerry Rafferty: Right Down the Line". TV documentary produced by Neon Productions (Glasgow) for BBC Scotland, co-produced by Valerie Lyon and Robert Noakes, 2011. On a Wing and a Prayer (1992) reunited him with his Stealers Wheel partner Egan on several tracks. It included three tracks co-written with Rafferty's brother Jim, also a singer-songwriter, who had been signed to Decca Records in the 1970s. Rafferty recorded a new version of his Humblebums song "Her Father Didn't Like Me Anyway" on the album Over My Head (1994). These were the last two records Rafferty produced with Hugh Murphy, who died in 1998. According to guitarist Hugh Burns, Murphy's death was "a great blow to Gerry" and marked the end of a creative partnership that had lasted almost 30 years.
Gerry Rafferty
''Another World''
Another World By the end of the 1990s, new technology enabled Rafferty to distance himself even further from the conventional approach of the music industry and work entirely on his own terms. Now based in London, he employed sound engineer Giles Twigg to assemble a Digidesign mobile recording studio and, with Twigg's help, recorded the album Another World in London, Scotland, Barbados, France, and Italy with collaborators from previous albums, including Hugh Burns, Mark Knopfler, Kenny Craddock, and Mo Foster.Giles Twigg CV details . Retrieved 22 February 2011Mo Foster Discography . Retrieved 22 February 2011 Through his company Icon Music, Rafferty promoted and sold the album independently on a website created specifically for the purpose. Another World, released in 2000, was originally available only via direct order from his website,, Retrieved from Wayback Machine, 26 February 2011 but since 2003 has been available on the Hypertension label. Another World, almost an esoteric work, also with the assistance of Mark Knopfler and Egan, featured an album cover illustrated by John Byrne, who also illustrated the covers for Can I Have My Money Back?, City to City, Night Owl, and Snakes and Ladders, and all three Stealers Wheel albums. Byrne was also responsible for one of Rafferty's most prized possessions: a hand-painted Martin acoustic guitar bearing his portrait and the name "Gerry Rafferty", which features in many photographs of the singer.You can take the boy out of Paisley... but you can't take Paisley out the boy! , Paisley Daily Express, 23 June 2000 Another World marked a new departure for the singer. As he explained in a press release heralding the new record in November 2000: "My heart and soul have gone into this album, and by releasing it in this way my creative influence has not been diluted in any way."News Release, PR Newswire, 27 November 2000. Finally, thanks to the Internet, it seemed Rafferty no longer needed the music industry: technology was allowing him to put his music directly in the hands of an appreciative audience. Rafferty felt he had matured as an artist, as he told the Evening Standard at the time of the release: "At my time of life, I don't want to be talking to 23-year-old record executives who are just trying to sell their products to 19-year-olds. I'm older and my audience is older. They'll know where to find me." In the same interview, he said that the entire record had been made for approximately £200,000, with half spent on travel, the recording system costing £75,000, and the website and marketing adding £25,000. Rafferty maintained his enthusiasm for this new approach to recording for the next three years. In a blog posting dated 31 March 2004 he wrote: "Let's get back to music: after all that's the only reason that this website has been set up." Another posting announced that Rafferty would begin to release music regularly as free downloads: "In reality, Gerry could put a new track out every two weeks or so. We will keep you informed of developments as they happen.", Retrieved from Wayback Machine archive of www.gerryrafferty.com, 21 February 2011 Only a handful of tracks were ever released, however, and the website eventually closed down without any explanation.
Gerry Rafferty
''Life Goes On''
Life Goes On During November 2009, Rafferty released what would be his final album, Life Goes On. This was again on the Hypertension music label. Featuring 18 tracks, the album contains six new recordings, covers of Christmas carols, plus also some traditional songs that had previously been available on the Gerry Rafferty website. The remaining tracks are remastered tracks from his previous three albums.
Gerry Rafferty
Posthumous releases
Posthumous releases Rafferty's death in January 2011 rekindled interest in the singer's work. His daughter Martha relaunched Rafferty's old website, gerryrafferty.com, with a full discography, rare photos, and new artwork by John Byrne. She portrayed her father as an autodidact with an "incredibly strong work ethic" and passion for books ("There were literally whole walls of book shelves at home and he'd read every single word. Mainly philosophy, art, religion, psychology and many a biography."). In September 2011, EMI issued a remastered collector's edition of City to City featuring previously unheard demo versions of "Baker Street", "Mattie's Rag", "City to City", and other tracks from the album. Other artists continue to be inspired by Rafferty's work. In 2012, Cuillin Recordings issued Paisley Spin, a remix of three tracks from Can I Have My Money Back? by Celtic fusion artist Martyn Bennett. Bonnie Raitt recorded a reggae treatment of "Right Down the Line" for her Slipstream album released 10 April 2012. Barbara Dickson released a tribute album of 13 Rafferty songs, To Each and Everyone: The Songs of Gerry Rafferty, in September 2013, including cover versions of "Baker Street", "The Ark", and "Steamboat Row". On 3 September 2021 Parlophone UK released Rest in Blue, an album on which Martha Rafferty completed a project started by her father from demos left by Rafferty. The collection of blues, rock, and folk demos had been planned for a new album before his death.
Gerry Rafferty
Attitude to the music industry
Attitude to the music industry Rafferty drew a clear distinction between the artistic integrity of a musician, on the one hand, and the music industry's need to create celebrities and sell products, on the other. In an interview with Colin Irwin in 1988, he said: "There's a thin line between being a songwriter and a singer and being a personality... If you feel uncomfortable with it you shouldn't do it. It's not for me – there are too many inherent contradictions."Gerry Rafferty Interview by Colin Irwin , Folk Roots, 1988 Two decades later, speaking to the press after Rafferty's funeral, Charlie Reid of The Proclaimers confirmed Rafferty's dislike of celebrity: "He was not entirely comfortable with fame. Even more so than most people who work in this business, he saw it as not a good thing."Gerry Rafferty's funeral is held in Paisley , BBC News, 21 January 2011. Reid believed Rafferty was fundamentally unsuited to the pressures of celebrity: "He struck me as a very, very sensitive man and for someone like that, fame was probably not appropriate."<ref name="telefuneral">Mourners pay tribute to Gerry Rafferty , 'The Daily Telegraph (London), 21 January 2011.</ref> Billy Connolly agrees that Rafferty had different priorities: "I wanted success and fame and I got it, to a degree. Gerry wanted respect. He wanted his talent to be respected. He wanted his songs to be respected. And he certainly got that." Generally an autobiographical writer, Rafferty returned to this theme often, in the lyrics of Stealers Wheel songs such as "Stuck in the Middle With You" and "Good Businessman", and later solo tracks like "Take the Money and Run" (from Night Owl), "Welcome to Hollywood" (from Snakes and Ladders), and "Sleepwalking" (from the album of the same name). The liner notes to the compilation album Right Down the Line, written by Jerry Gilbert with Rafferty's close co-operation, note his consistent refusal to tour the United States and "generally 'play the industry game'.", Retrieved from Wayback Machine archive of www.gerryrafferty.com, 21 February 2011 It was ironic that Rafferty—a lover and collector of religious icons, who would later name one of his publishing companies "Icon Music", Retrieved from Wayback Machine archive of www.gerryrafferty.com, 21 February 2011—was also an iconoclast. According to Michael Gray, Rafferty's personal manager at the height of his success, he turned down many opportunities to work with other artists:Gerry Rafferty Obituary , Michael Gray, 4 January 2011 "... he retained a healthy scepticism not just about the music industry but about society, money and politics in general. His background was soaked in Scottish socialism and poverty, his mind sharp and his personality acerbic, and he wasn't going to be dazzled by the glamour of success."Death of Gerry Rafferty by Michael Gray, Bob Dylan Encyclopedia Blog, 5 January 2011 Rafferty never changed his mind about the music business; if anything, his views hardened. In 2000, he told the Paisley Daily Express that the second Stealers Wheel album, released in 1974, had been named Ferguslie Park, after a deprivedStudy shows 'most deprived' areas BBC News, 17 October 2006 area of Paisley, "to get as far away as possible from all the bullshit of the music industry in London." Monsignor John Tormey, celebrating Rafferty's funeral mass, suggested the singer's attitude to fame was an indication of his spiritual integrity: "He always searched for a more authentic way to live his life, shunning the outward trappings of celebrity so that he might live as he chose to live his life." Personal life thumb|Eaglestone House in Strathpeffer In 1965, 18-year-old Rafferty met 15-year-old Carla Ventilla, an apprentice hairdresser from an Italian family in Clydebank, at a dancehall—a story he later recounted in the song "Shipyard Town" on North and South. They married in 1970 and lived in Scotland with their daughter, Martha Mary, before moving to the south of England in the late 1970s, where they divided their time between their farm near the Kent–Sussex border and a home in Hampstead, London. Rafferty's lengthy commutes from London to Scotland inspired some songs on the album City to City (including the title track and "Mattie's Rag", which recounted his delight at being reunited with his daughter), while the later move south inspired "The Garden of England" (from the album Snakes and Ladders) and some songs on North and South. Rafferty and Ventilla divorced in 1990. After the completion of Another World in 2000, Rafferty planned to move back to Scotland and bought Eaglestone House, "a substantial listed 1860s mansion" in the Highland village of Strathpeffer, although he sold the property two years later and never actually moved in. Alcoholism Rafferty enjoyed alcohol from a young age, and early songs, such as "One Drink Down", "Baker Street", and "Night Owl", freely mention the subject. According to Michael Gray, the singer's personal manager in the early 1980s: "It never occurred to me in all the time I knew him that he was heading for alcoholism. Maybe I should have realised, but I didn't. I'm unsure whether he did." As the 1980s progressed, Rafferty's growing drinking problem placed his marriage under impossible strain; his wife divorced him in 1990, although they remained close. In the late 1980s, Rafferty had told journalist Colin Irwin: "I was always very conscious about keeping a low profile because that's the way I like to go about it. And I don't plan to be in the public eye too much now either." In 1995, Rafferty was deeply affected by the death of his older brother Joseph, an event from which family and friends said he never fully recovered. In the last decade of his life, having taken pains to shun the fame and celebrity that accompanied his musical achievements, Rafferty found himself making headlines once again as he struggled with alcoholism and depression and the increasingly erratic behaviour they spawned. While the news stories focused on Rafferty's binges, they revealed nothing of the impact on his family and friends. His girlfriend Enzina Fuschini said she: "felt that he was under some sort of evil spell. He felt crippled by it... I saw a man in despair". According to Rafferty's ex-wife Carla: "There was no hope. I would never have left him if there'd been a glimmer of a chance of him recovering." Disappearance In 2008, Rafferty moved away from California and briefly rented a home in Ireland, where his drinking soon became a problem again. In July that year, he flew to London, where he stayed in the five-star Westbury Hotel in Mayfair and began a four-day drinking binge during which he extensively damaged his room. Speaking to The Independent newspaper later, the hotel's director commented: "It was such a shame. In person, Mr Rafferty was a really nice man, he kept himself to himself and didn't bother the other guests but he was clearly on a downward spiral. He was in self-destruct mode." There were conflicting reports about what happened next. The newspaper Scotland on Sunday reported that Rafferty had been asked to leave the hotel and had then checked himself into St Thomas' Hospital suffering from a chronic liver condition, brought on by heavy drinking. The same report claimed that on 1 August 2008, Rafferty had disappeared, leaving his belongings behind, and that the hospital had filed a missing persons report. No such missing persons report existed. On 17 February 2009, The Guardian reported that Rafferty was in hiding in the south of England, being cared for by a friend. Subsequently, Rafferty's spokesperson Paul Charles told The Independent that he had been in touch with Rafferty a fortnight previously and that he was alive and well but had no plans to either record or tour. This was contradicted by a report in The Daily Telegraph on the following day, which quoted a statement his solicitors made to Channel 4 News: "Contrary to reports, Gerry is extremely well and has been living in Tuscany for the last six months... he continues to compose and record new songs and music... and he hopes to release a new album of his most recent work in the summer of this year [2009]." The album, titled Life Goes On, was released in November 2009. After leaving St Thomas' Hospital, and while claiming he was in Tuscany, he was moving from one London hotel to another. During this time, he met Enzina Fuschini, an Italian artist living in Dorset. Rafferty and Fuschini rented a large home together in Upton, near Poole.Neighbours of Baker Street star Gerry Rafferty speak of shock at his collapse , Bournemouth Echo, 11 November 2010. Fuschini said she cared for the singer during 2009 and tried to help him overcome his alcoholism, and that he proposed to her at the Ritz Hotel in Paris on Christmas Eve that year.'I lost my soulmate' says Gerry Rafferty's fiancee , Bournemouth Echo, 3 February 2011. Death In November 2010, Rafferty was admitted to the Royal Bournemouth Hospital where he was put on a life-support machine and treated for multiple organ failure. After being taken off life support, Rafferty recovered for a short time, and doctors thought that he might recover.Hope for family as Rafferty is taken off life support machine by Brian Donnelly, The Herald (Glasgow), 12 November 2010 Rafferty died of liver failure at the home of his daughter Martha in Stroud, Gloucestershire, on 4 January 2011. He was 63. A requiem mass was held for Rafferty at St Mirin's Cathedral in his native town of Paisley on 21 January 2011. The mass was streamed live over the Internet. Politicians in attendance were the First Minister of Scotland Alex Salmond MSP, Wendy Alexander MSP, Hugh Henry MSP, and Robin Harper MSP. The musicians present included Craig and Charlie Reid of The Proclaimers, former bandmates Joe Egan and Rab Noakes, Barbara Dickson, and Graham Lyle. The eulogy was given by Rafferty's longtime friend John Byrne. His remains were then cremated at the Woodside Crematorium in PaisleyMourners' Farewell To Singer Gerry Rafferty by James Matthews, Sky News, 21 January 2011 and his ashes scattered on Iona. He is survived by his daughter Martha, granddaughter Celia, and brother Jim. Will and legal dispute over estate In October 2011, newspapers reported that Rafferty's immediate family were the beneficiaries of his £1.25 million estate. Rafferty had apparently not changed his will after meeting Enzina Fuschini in 2008 and left her nothing. Fuschini contested the will, but it was later reported that she had lost her case and £75,000 legal costs were awarded against her. Tributes and legacy Newspapers printed lengthy obituaries for the singer; in The Guardian, Michael Gray charted Rafferty's long downward spiral into alcoholism, while a full-page obituary in The Times summarised his career more positively: "As well as being a singer of considerable talent who at one time had the pop world at his feet, Gerry Rafferty was also a consummate songwriter, blessed with sensitivity and an enviable melodic flair that at its best recalled Paul McCartney."Obituary, Gerry Rafferty. The Times, Wednesday 5 January 2011. Other entertainers also paid tribute to Rafferty, with comedian and ex-bandmate Billy Connolly calling him "a hugely talented songwriter and singer who will be greatly missed" and musician Tom Robinson saying, "His early work with Stealers Wheel was an inspiration to a whole generation of songwriters in the 70s, including me." Speaking after the funeral, Charlie Reid of The Proclaimers said: "I think Gerry Rafferty was one of the few people who really successfully straddled the worlds of both folk and popular music. He did it really well and he was respected in both camps." Barbara Dickson also paid tribute to her friend, whom she described as a "luminous, glorious Scottish musician".Tributes paid to Gerry Rafferty by John Kilbride, STV, 5 January 2011 Finbar Furey, who knew Rafferty for over 40 years, said he "was in a different league completely. He didn't know how good he was. He was one of the most talented musicians and singers I ever knew but he completely underestimated his own talent. He was a very humble man." Shortly after news of the singer's death, Lily Allen tweeted the message "Rest in Peace Gerry x" with a video link to the song "Right Down the Line", reputedly one of her favourite music tracks.La Roux: Soundtrack of My Life by Gareth Grundy, The Guardian, 25 April 2010 Electropop star Elly Jackson described "Right Down the Line" as "my favourite track of all time. It makes me think of home, nostalgia and happiness." In November 2012, Rafferty's hometown of Paisley paid tribute to the singer by naming a street in the Shortroods area "Gerry Rafferty Drive". Gordon Laurie, director of the housing association behind the project, commented: "It is a fitting tribute to a brilliant musician who lives on through his music." In January 2013, BBC Radio 2 re-broadcast their 2012 programme "Bring It All Home – Gerry Rafferty Remembered", which had been recorded live at Celtic Connections in Glasgow and was presented by Ricky Ross. Contributing artists included his friend Rab Noakes, The Proclaimers, Barbara Dickson, Ron Sexsmith, Jack Bruce, Paul Brady, Emma Pollock, James Vincent McMorrow and Betsy Cook. Rafferty's guitarist Hugh Burns, multi-instrumentalist Graham Preskett and saxophonist Mel Collins, were also featured. Discography Studio albums Can I Have My Money Back? (1971) City to City (1978) Night Owl (1979) Snakes and Ladders (1980) Sleepwalking (1982) North and South (1988) On a Wing and a Prayer (1992) Over My Head (1994) Another World (2000) Life Goes On (2009) Rest in Blue'' (2021)
Gerry Rafferty
References
References
Gerry Rafferty
External links
External links BBC Obituary, 4 January 2011 The Guardian obituary – Singer and songwriter known for Stuck in the Middle With You and Baker Street Category:1947 births Category:2011 deaths Category:20th-century Scottish male singers Category:20th-century British guitarists Category:Alcohol-related deaths in England Category:British blues rock musicians Category:British soft rock musicians Category:Deaths from liver failure Category:21st-century Scottish male singers Category:Scottish male guitarists Category:Musicians from Paisley, Renfrewshire Category:People educated at St Mirin's Academy Category:Scottish buskers Category:Scottish expatriate musicians in the United States Category:Scottish folk musicians Category:Scottish people of Irish descent Category:Scottish pop singers Category:Scottish rock guitarists Category:Scottish rock singers Category:Scottish Roman Catholics Category:Scottish male singer-songwriters Category:Scottish singer-songwriters Category:Scottish tenors Category:Transatlantic Records artists Category:United Artists Records artists Category:Stealers Wheel members Category:The Humblebums members Category:People from Renfrewshire
Gerry Rafferty
Table of Content
Short description, Early years, Musical career, The Humblebums and Stealers Wheel, ''City to City'' and ''Night Owl'', ''Snakes and Ladders'', ''Sleepwalking'' and ''North and South'', ''On a Wing and a Prayer'' and ''Over My Head'', ''Another World'', ''Life Goes On'', Posthumous releases, Attitude to the music industry, References, External links
Eucarya
'''Eucarya'''
Eucarya may refer to: Eukaryotes, organisms whose cells contain a nucleus and complex structures inside the membranes. Eucarya, a formerly recognized genus of flowering plants that is now considered to be part of the genus Santalum.
Eucarya
Table of Content
'''Eucarya'''
Battle of St. Jakob an der Birs
Short description
The Battle of St. Jakob an der Birs was fought between the Old Swiss Confederacy and French (mostly Armagnac) mercenaries, on the banks of the river Birs. The battle took place on 26 August 1444 and was part of the Old Zürich War. The site of the battle was near Münchenstein, Switzerland, just over 1 km outside the city walls of Basel, today within Basel's St-Alban district.
Battle of St. Jakob an der Birs
Background
Background In 1443, the seven cantons of the Old Swiss Confederacy invaded the canton of Zürich and besieged the city. Zürich had allied with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III, who now appealed to King Charles VII of France to send an army to relieve the siege. Charles, seeking to send away the "écorcheurs", troublesome troops made idle by the truce with King Henry VI of England in the Hundred Years' War, sent his son the Dauphin (later King Louis XI of France) with an army of about 30,000 of these écorcheurs into Switzerland, most of them Armagnacs, to relieve Zürich. the estimate of 30,000 to 40,000 troops is due to Hans Rudolf Kurz, Schweizerschlachten 2nd ed. As the French forces entered Swiss territory at Basel, the Swiss commanders stationed at Farnsburg decided to send an advance troop of 1,300, primarily young pikemen. These moved to Liestal on the night of 25 August, where they were joined by a local force of 200.